Open iissaacc123 opened 1 year ago
On an other Project of vGpu install i found this:
The following consumer/not-vGPU-qualified NVIDIA GPUs can be used with vGPU:
Most GPUs from the Maxwell 2.0 generation (GTX 9xx, Quadro Mxxxx, Tesla Mxx) EXCEPT the GTX 970 All GPUs from the Pascal generation (GTX 10xx, Quadro Pxxxx, Tesla Pxx) All GPUs from the Turing generation (GTX 16xx, RTX 20xx, Txxxx)
Maybe your GTX 970 is the problem.
On an other Project of vGpu install i found this:
The following consumer/not-vGPU-qualified NVIDIA GPUs can be used with vGPU:
Most GPUs from the Maxwell 2.0 generation (GTX 9xx, Quadro Mxxxx, Tesla Mxx) EXCEPT the GTX 970 All GPUs from the Pascal generation (GTX 10xx, Quadro Pxxxx, Tesla Pxx) All GPUs from the Turing generation (GTX 16xx, RTX 20xx, Txxxx)
Maybe your GTX 970 is the problem.
GPU-PV is not vGPU.
Hyper-V continues to output to its to its video display, and mouse is working over parsec. Even fully closing every hyper-V window so they're not visually on my display anywhere doesn't fix it. I'm using Nvidia Geforce GTX 970, It is my secondary graphics that is running my secondary display, So it is active.
When you start the VM, do not open the Hyper-V Viewer
I know its not the same,but its strange thats the only card not working for vGpu. So maybe it could be a problem here too.
I think here they discuss a similar problem: https://github.com/jamesstringerparsec/Easy-GPU-PV/issues/248
I have this problem also after i restart a VM. But like in the other discussion i get a picture as soon as i open a Hyper V Viewer on the Host. But i connect parsec from a client. Not like him from the host too.
Hyper-V continues to output to its to its video display, and mouse is working over parsec. Even fully closing every hyper-V window so they're not visually on my display anywhere doesn't fix it. I'm using Nvidia Geforce GTX 970, It is my secondary graphics that is running my secondary display, So it is active.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/29620630/219303015-95248f08-d7cf-4916-93b1-46b8ae500c08.mp4