I hope this will solve your issue! Good Luck!ĮDIT: Oh. Method 3.5: You can also try some third party display uninstaller tool (although I don't really know any tools but people said it worked.)
Once you uninstall, simply reinstall the drivers ( Update Driver Software), reset your laptop and hope for the best. Again, right click at your graphics driver and click on Uninstall. Method 3: If both methods didn't work, I recommend you fully to uninstall the driver from Device Manager. Click on Roll Back Driver and just select on the reason why you want to downgrade it. Extend the Display Adapter, right click on your graphics driver and click on Properties. Method 2: Did the error started to happen after you installed the latest drivers? If so, you can Roll Back (Downgrade) your display's driver from Device Manager by typing "Device Manager" from the start menu. Method 1: Simply downscale your resolution (from 1440p to 1080 or from 1080 to 900p.) I will give you 3 different methods that could maybe fix your issue: and another problem is when i disable amd drivers, the resolution is stuck at 1280x720. When i disable my AMD graphics driver and use the intel one, this problem won't occur. I finally was able to encode 10 videos in Handbrake/NVEnc non stop without freezing.My laptop automatically restarts 1 minute after boot, shows an error message "Thread stuck in device driver". My system is not 100% stable as yet but it's a huge step forward compared to what I did documented here above. SoĬ- change the virtualHW.version to e.g. If at this point you can operate the passwhtough video card but somehow is unstable: downgrade your VM hardware version to something lower than 10. I had luck with link but other people with different system and dfferent GPUs are forced to use different reset values.
Accepted values are: d3d0, link, bridge, default Edit your /etc/vmware/passthru.map and modify the bridge keyword into a different value. After further researches I ended up applying 2 additional modifications:Ħ) Since my video card has 8GB of memory as an extension to point 4) above under the VM parameters also add:ħ) If an only if your VM is unstable past this point you can attempt a final step which will require the host reboot. The steps 1 to 5 above helped me to make the card operational but. I had a pre-existing VM in BIOS so didn't want to reinstall so all this procedure refer to BIOS only. NOTE2: Reading up in Internet it seems like pass-through works better with EFI rather than BIOS.
Hence remote console is not working but you can install your own remote admin software I suppose.
That's when I guess Windows disables the sVGA and set the NVIDIA to be the primary. NOTE: The only negative point since the sVGA is disable in the windows configuration, the ESXi remote console will only show up to the windows loading logo and get stuck there. So forget about device manager and head straight to the Windows Graphic Settings (right click on desktop/Display Settings):Ī) highlight the display linked to the NVIDIA cardĬ) under "multiple displays" select "show only on 2" (in my particular case) Note, vmwaretools will bypass any attempt to disable the internal sVGA or it's virtual display. Leave the default sVGA config untouchedĤ) Modify the parameter of the Windows10 VM adding:ĥ) Once you boot into Windows I first had to make the NVIDIA display act as primary. If you don't do this method below is not going not work ESXi still boots but the progress bar is never to reach the end.Ģ) Enable pass-through on the card (via system management) and rebootģ) assign the card as PCI to the VM and reserve all the RAM you have assigned. State: Normal (not connected to any vCenter Server)ġ) Once you install the GPU make sure the Server BIOS prefers internal video card to any PCIE Without monitor directly connected to the GPU this below is likely not to work. I have however ordered but not received yet a dummy HDMI plug which essentially simulate a monitor connection. I got a traditional 1070 instead and plugged an old monitor via DVI. First of all I had to replace the GTX 1060 as it was a mining card e.g.