- UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ FULL
- UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ SOFTWARE
- UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ WINDOWS
Mine looks like this: linux /vmlinuz-4.15.0-20-generic root=/dev/mapper/ubuntu-mate-vg-root ro quiet splash i915.alpha_support=1 $vt_handoff Using this menu, I edited the default boot entry to include i915.alpha_support=1. Subsequent reboots after failed boots make the grub menu visible.
Second I modified the grub kernel line to include i915.alpha_support=1.
UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ SOFTWARE
I re-enabled it later after installing the Nvidia closed-source binary blob driver, which threatens our software freedom, but has the virtue of actually working.Intel Coffee-Lake support is apparently still in Alpha, despite various Ubuntu forum posts saying it will be standard as of Bionic, in kernel 4.15.įirst, to prevent nouveau ballsing things up, I disabled the discrete graphics in the EFI setup menu, forcing it to use the Intel on-board graphics.It locks up the entire system if you try. The nouveau (Open-source Nvidia) driver does not support Nvidia graphics cards made since the Bush presidency.The install went normally, and I rebooted when prompted, removing the USB drive before the POST.Īfter the Gigabyte POST splash screen, the screen just went black.Īfter calming down, I googled on another machine, and found that this was probably a combination of two issues:
UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ FULL
I initiated a full install, erasing all existing partitions, and using an encrypted root in LVM. I chose the 'Try out Ubuntu' grub option, just to make sure Ubuntu would boot to the desktop on this machine. Using Tuxboot, I prepared a new Ubuntu-MATE Bionic Live USB and booted it from the F12 menu. This took a few hours, but I am not going to dual-boot this thing, so I want a backup, just in case. I told Clonezilla to use 'partclone > nttfsclone > dd' mode to take images of all partitions on the Aero's NVMe, via SSH, and then take and verify SHA256 checksums of each partition. I then connected a network cable from the Aero into the same gigabit switch to which I have my fileserver connected (an HP Proliant Microserver, since you asked). then blatted it onto a smallish USB drive with Tuxboot (see install details at ), and then told the Aero to boot off USB via the F12 boot menu. I downloaded the version based on Ubuntu Bionic from: The standard firmware settings were mostly fine (supporting all USB modes, etc.), so I just disabled SecureBoot.įortunately, Clonezilla's Ubuntu-based testing branch does boot in EFI mode. This machine does not support booting in 'Legacy BIOS' mode at all, so if the OS doesn't support UEFI mode, you're snookered.
UBUNTU INSTALL INTEL GRAPHICS DRIVER GZ WINDOWS
Installing was not quite straightforward, and since I couldn't find anything online detailing other peoples' experiences, I thought I'd post my own.įirst thing I did when I unboxed it was boot Clonezilla from a USB drive to take a full disk image of the Windows install. I do not plan to dual boot, but I plan to get a new 1TB Samsung 970 NVMe to put in the 2nd slot, when they come out/when my bank account recovers. I love this machine, and it's perfect for my needs.
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