NVIDIA GeForce 8: Linux vs. Windows
When it comes to binary display drivers under Linux, NVIDIA is generally known as the company that's able to offer drivers that are on par with their Windows driver. Unlike the known performance issues with the ATI/AMD fglrx driver where it's not uncommon for the driver to be 50% slower than the Windows Catalyst equivalent, the NVIDIA Linux driver has performed roughly the same if not faster in some cases. This has also been true for the NVIDIA Solaris driver as the performance bastion can largely be attributed to the shared driver code-base between all NVIDIA-supported platforms (Windows, Linux, Solaris, and FreeBSD). However, with the GeForce 8 series we have come across some unusual issues that are limiting the performance of the GeForce 8 series under Linux and Solaris. In this article, we have additional information on these austere performance problems along with benchmarks showing the frame-rate differences between Windows XP and Linux.
As a brief background to the GeForce 8 series support under Linux, the GeForce 8800GTX was launched in early November and was accompanied by a same-day Linux driver (1.0-9742). The GeForce 8 product support continued and in the NVIDIA 100.14.09 driver the official support was extended to include the 8300, 8400, 8500, and 8600 series. However, the support throughout this time has been somewhat of a mixed bag.
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