In this article, I will share some of my experience on installing NVIDIA driver and CUDA on Linux OS. Here I mainly use Ubuntu as example. Comments for CentOS/Fedora are also provided as much as I can.
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
# WARNING: These steps seem to not work anymore! | |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Purge existign CUDA first | |
sudo apt --purge remove "cublas*" "cuda*" | |
sudo apt --purge remove "nvidia*" | |
# Install CUDA Toolkit 10 | |
wget https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/repos/ubuntu1804/x86_64/cuda-repo-ubuntu1804_10.0.130-1_amd64.deb |
So one of the painful points of using docker
on OS X is that you need to run a virtualbox VM, which often suffers from performance issues. With xhyve, a OS X virtualization system, and docker-machine-xhyve you can now have docker
use the native OS X hypervisor to run containers.
No more dealing with virtualbox shenanigans!
In this script, I've also set up a way to autoconfigure terminal sessions to load docker's environment vars (dependent on docker-machine
) so you do not have to run eval $(docker-machine env whatever)
every time you open a new terminal window.