Score:0

Booting into safe graphics mode after Nvidia driver upgrade

in flag

I decided to upgrade the nvidia driver I was using, I opened additional drivers and previously it was 660(proprietary), it had a new version 670(proprietary, tested). It also has tested in it, so I thought what could go wrong. I selected the driver and clicked apply. It downloaded the driver and told me to restart. I restarted and now I'm booting into what seems to be safe graphics mode, I'm unable to use my touchpad, Bluetooth and anything and there are no animations. I tried to revert back to 660 driver, but I can't use either WiFi or Ethernet.

I have secure boot enabled.

ChanganAuto avatar
us flag
So disable Secure Boot and try again (or use mokutil to sign and trust the proprietary drivers) otherwise no matter what version you installed it won't work, Secure Boot prevents unsigned drivers from loading. By the way, the versions are 460 and 470 respectively.
Mayank avatar
in flag
I tried disabling Secret Boot, but it won't boot the proprietary drivers. I looked for the option in my bios to sign and trust the proprietary drivers, but I couldn't find it. I guess disabling secure boot and reinstallation is the only way.
ChanganAuto avatar
us flag
The option to sign the drivers is at the OS, not the firmware.
Mayank avatar
in flag
I looked up mokutil, it's a bit complex for me. I think a better choice would be to just disable Secure Boot and reinstall because I may run into similar problems in the future by updating drivers and upgrading to a newer Ubuntu version.
mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.