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Driver Nvidia Mac Os Sierra: How to Enable CUDA Support for Your NVIDIA Graphics Card



Kernel Extensions in backtrace: com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily(516.28)[4850AEE9-AB7B-3F9B-ABC4-8B218016F6A8]@0xffffff7f863ff000->0xffffff7f86441fff dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily(2.9)[CD25C5B3-4E10-3F20-8C36-C4BD6803ED60]@0xffffff7f86094000 com.apple.nvidia.driver.NVDAResman(10.2.2)[31F1CA86-E625-320E-A6DC-46FF7FC3943B]@0xffffff7f8646a000->0xffffff7f86750fff dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily(2.9)[CD25C5B3-4E10-3F20-8C36-C4BD6803ED60]@0xffffff7f86094000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IONDRVSupport(516.28)[3EA927A7-90EC-356A-A07E-B7E4246E5C40]@0xffffff7f8644e000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily(516.28)[4850AEE9-AB7B-3F9B-ABC4-8B218016F6A8]@0xffffff7f863ff000 dependency: com.apple.AppleGraphicsDeviceControl(3.15.26)[DD390B93-7A57-3981-B709-CE0EE9127B5C]@0xffffff7f8645e000 com.apple.iokit.IOAcceleratorFamily2(348.5)[D748F500-65D8-30C4-AA70-2D245E7851C9]@0xffffff7f86827000->0xffffff7f868b8fff dependency: com.apple.driver.AppleMobileFileIntegrity(1.0.5)[441A112D-E54F-3B2C-82A9-9FE928BBE7F9]@0xffffff7f86812000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily(2.9)[CD25C5B3-4E10-3F20-8C36-C4BD6803ED60]@0xffffff7f86094000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily(516.28)[4850AEE9-AB7B-3F9B-ABC4-8B218016F6A8]@0xffffff7f863ff000 com.apple.GeForce(10.2.2)[0D8C53A6-A9AC-3DB9-8DA0-FF9477799500]@0xffffff7f868c8000->0xffffff7f86962fff dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily(2.9)[CD25C5B3-4E10-3F20-8C36-C4BD6803ED60]@0xffffff7f86094000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IONDRVSupport(516.28)[3EA927A7-90EC-356A-A07E-B7E4246E5C40]@0xffffff7f8644e000 dependency: com.apple.nvidia.driver.NVDAResman(10.2.2)[31F1CA86-E625-320E-A6DC-46FF7FC3943B]@0xffffff7f8646a000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily(516.28)[4850AEE9-AB7B-3F9B-ABC4-8B218016F6A8]@0xffffff7f863ff000 dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOAcceleratorFamily2(348.5)[D748F500-65D8-30C4-AA70-2D245E7851C9]@0xffffff7f86827000




Driver Nvidia Mac Os Sierra



if I change inside new kext applegraphiccontrol kext/contents/plugin this file: AppleGraphicsDevicePolicy.kext with an old and patched 10.12.5 one...I have two monitors working and nvidiaweb drivers loaded fine


Followed the same instructions, the web driver loads the frame buffer and shows as GTX 1080, but no graphics acceleration. Can set 165Hz on the monitor, but no transparency/QE/CI. I believe the shift to Metal for the GUI on 10.13 means we'll need new drivers from nVidia to take advantage. Waiting patiently!


I tried this -nvidia-web-driver-updates-for-macos-high-sierra-update-06052017/page-2?do=findComment&comment=2439371but it did not work. I tried to replace the kexts using these files -nvidia-web-driver-updates-for-macos-high-sierra-update-06052017/?do=findComment&comment=2437874 but when I give boot I get A disconnected cable message on the monitor, but the pc does not restart. I can only enter the system if I use nv_disable = 1


I suspect its more an Apple issue than an NVidia one. Indeed, I am beginning to wonder if Apple are deliberately sabotaging machines with NVidia cards in them. There is no proper NVidia support in 10.14 at all! And security updates that crash graphics drivers? Come on!


But surprise, the number is 17G66, I cannot find anything on that version. I installed the webdrivers through GITHUB @Benjamin-Dobbel and the webdriver 10.10.40.130 was installed. I then installed the latest CUDA 418.163underneath it says : GPU Driver version 355.11.10.10.40.102 update required while the driver manager says I have the latest 355.11.10.10.40.130 ?!?


Resolution:3840 x 2160 (2160p 4K UHD - Ultra High Definition)UI Looks like:1920 x 1080 @ 60 HzFramebuffer Depth:24-Bit Color (ARGB8888)Mirror:OffOnline:YesRotation:SupportedAdapter Type:DisplayPortAutomatically Adjust Brightness:Nocuda_driver_418.163_GPU_Driver-387.10.10.10.40.127.png1344616 191 KB


Does anyone have a contact at NVIDIA for the web driver? It clearly needs fixing as it just doesn't work with Sierra GTX950 - in fact, whilst the card is in my machine, it won't even boot! It gets caught in a kernel panic loop.


I have Sierra running on my MacPro3,1 - had to hack it to do so. I have installed the beta driver for Sierra and it installed successfully. However, when I try and boot with my GTX950 card, it won't boot, it crashes, and loops. This didn't happen in el capitan and the drivers for that OS. Therefore, I suspect the driver isn't working properly yet - it clearly works in a PC hackintosh environment (well, at least for you which is great) but not in the Mac Pro world yet.


Yes, I got it working with the GTX 950 - I am using a Mac Pro with the web driver. So if it was an issue with the web driver, it wouldn't have worked for me as the only way to get it to work in OSX is the web driver.


So, for this work properly, after a clean uninstall and install Quadro & GeForce MacOS Driver Release we should not install the latest driver CUDA 9.0.222 driver for Mac and instead install the older CUDA 9.0.214 driver for Mac. Is that correct?


Mac hardware and GPU software drivers have always been deeply integrated into the system. This design fuels the visually rich and graphical macOS experience as well as many deeper platform compute and graphics features. These include accelerating the user interface, providing support for advanced display features, rendering 3D graphics for pro software and games, processing photos and videos, driving powerful GPU compute features, and accelerating machine learning tasks. This deep integration also enables optimal battery life while providing for greater system performance and stability.


Apple develops, integrates, and supports macOS GPU drivers to ensure there are consistent GPU capabilities across all Mac products, including rich APIs like Metal, Core Animation, Core Image, and Core ML. To deliver the best possible customer experience, GPU drivers need to be engineered, integrated, tested, and delivered with each version of macOS. Aftermarket GPU drivers delivered by third parties are not compatible with macOS.


The GPU drivers delivered with macOS are also designed to enable a high-quality and high-performance experience when using an eGPU, as described in the list of recommended eGPU chassis and graphics card configurations below. Because of this deep system integration, only graphics cards that use the same GPU architecture as those built into Mac products are supported in macOS.


If you are logged in as a Guest or Standard User, you will not be able to install the driver. Some organizations do not allow users to regulate what they install and manipulate system and application settings. Contact your system admin for help installing the driver in such a situation.


I just updated to the latest macOS Sierra 10.12.2. The NVIDIA CUDA driver in the System Preferences pane shows the following (as you can see the driver shows "No newer CUDA Driver available") but it shows in red as Update Required.


Also, I understand people wanting to help here. But, when your card works fine in 10.12.1 and then glitches out and says its driver is out of date in 10.12.2, then something isn't right...And it's not because our machines are too old.


It turns out that NVIDIA actually released one version of the Web Drivers with Volta support: 387.10.10.15.15.108 (opens new window). However, this version was reported as unstable for some users and NVIDIA pulled it soon afterward. Ever since, no further versions of the Web Drivers have been released with Volta support. Because of the reported bugginess and that NVIDIA has pulled these drivers, we're going to treat them as unsupported.


Nvidia today has released drivers for its PCI-e graphics cards for users running the latest version of macOS High Sierra. The drivers are for Quadro and GeForce Pascal-based models and should bring compatibility for legacy Mac Pro users running High Sierra.


The drivers were made available on Wednesday, with the release first noted by xlr8yourmac. Version 378.10.10.10.15.114 is specific to the current High Sierra build, and will need to be updated and re-released for every incremental upgrade of the operating system that follows.


The driver contains unspecified performance improvements and bug fixes. Additionally, the driver package that includes a new CUDA download that includes the new 9.0 version of the toolkit, plus beta support for iMac and MacBook Pro systems with Nvidia graphics.


Brief testing of the new driver with an external GPU and Nvidia GeForce 980ti showed compatibility of the combo restored under the 10.13.0 beta release of High Sierra. Further AppleInsider comparative testing on Nvidia versus AMD cards in Thunderbolt 3 enclosures will resume as a result of the release.


I just used these today. Upgraded my 2012 Mac Pro tower to High Sierra. I have a non-Mac supported NVIDIA GeForce 970 in my MacPro so I always have to wait for these drivers to come out, then put the original ATI 5770 in it so I can upgrade (including dot dot releases), then install the updated driver and then put the NVIDIA card back in. Pain in the ass yes, but I only have to do it every once in a while (whenever Apple releases any kind of macOS update). I'm glad NVIDIA is typically on the ball with updating the driver.


macxpress said: I just used these today. Upgraded my 2012 Mac Pro tower to High Sierra. I have a non-Mac supported NVIDIA GeForce 970 in my MacPro so I always have to wait for these drivers to come out, then put the original ATI 5770 in it so I can upgrade (including dot dot releases), then install the updated driver and then put the NVIDIA card back in. Pain in the ass yes, but I only have to do it every once in a while (whenever Apple releases any kind of macOS update). I'm glad NVIDIA is typically on the ball with updating the driver. It's generally been within a few days of a shipping OS version, which is nice. While I've got the RX580 in my eGPU for most of the work here, I've got a 980ti in my 5,1. 2ff7e9595c


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