I have VS2008 on a virtual machine with Windows7 32 bits. So, with the 1050Ti SC model he should see the debug option available and unchecked. The thing is that on GPU-Z says that Default Clock is 1020 Mhz so the debug mode shouldn't be able to change the clock to 863Mhz (which is the base on nvidia site). I use VirtualBox with a host with Windows7 64 bits. Re: NVIDIa debug mode - grayed out Sunday, Janu2:07 PM ( ) I believe the debug mode is triggered by nonstandard clocks and or a modified BIOS from the reference model. debug mode should set clocks to factory stock, your high boost clocks are due to good cooling and higher fan speed. Manually set the following system variables of virtual machineĪdd to the Path system variable C:\CUDA\bin64 Is there any way to run CUDA code from the virtual machine? If that is not possible then can I at least compile the code on the Virtual Machine and then run it on the host, or does the nvcc compiler need access to the GPU card for information? Also, can the CUDA code be ran in emulation mode on the Guest VM? It would be nice if I could compile, debug in emulation mode, on the VM and then later run the non emulation version on the host.Ĭopy the host CUDA instalation directory in the Virtual Machine Then, navigate to Display > Change Resolution. Right-click the desktop and select the NVIDIA Control Panel. This can be done using an application such as MSI Afterburner. The host machine also happens to be running Windows 7 64-bit. NVIDIA have outlined the solutions below: Reduce your GPUs Clock Speed by 200MHz. Currently I do C development using MSVC 2008 on a Windows 7 64-bit Virtual Machine running under Oracle Sun Virtualbox.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |