

I don’t recall ever installing CUDA (I might have), and I don’t have a package by that name. run installer, it tells me that there is a previous package manager installation of the driver. I have two questions:įirst, is it a problem that my Linux Kernel is newer than the listed version? I’m running 5.3.0-46-generic. I want to use the Toolkit to build Blender with CUDA (and maybe Optix) support. Use the yum history option for small update rollbacks.I am trying to install NVIDIA CUDA Toolkit for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS by following these instructions on the NVIDIA website. Thus, downgrading a system to minor version (ex: RHEL6.1 to RHEL6.0) is not recommended as this might leave the system in undesired state. Note: Rollback of selinux, selinux-policy-*, kernel, glibc (dependencies of glibc such as gcc) packages to older version is not supported.

Here is a Note for the yum history rollback from the given link. How to use yum history to roll back an update in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, 7 RedHat gives out a really good explanation on how to use yum history to rollback installs Once you are signed into the terminal session, you can just yum history to pull up your install history and reverse your installs. If your system gets stuck trying to load a graphical interface, try and just do a CTRL+ALT F2 (RHEL based systems) and get into a terminal session. If you are stuck at a graphical loading page: I know the answer for Ubuntu but it also works on CentOS, I have had to do this before. the steps can be found here How do I boot into single-user mode from GRUB?. One option is to edit grub before selecting an image and changing your boot option to default to terminal session instead of a graphical load.
