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iAdjunct

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Everything posted by iAdjunct

  1. I'm setting up a new system for my sister. I have: - MSI x570-A Pro - Ryzen 5 2600 - EVGA GTX 1660 XC - The latest version of unRAID (flashed onto a drive with the unRAID utility today) When I attempt to boot the VM, I get no video out of the car. I added both the vfio-pci.ids (all four IDs for this card) and video=efifb:off to the boot options. Note that the card has four PCIe functions, all four are in the same IOMMU group, and that group only contains this card. The motherboard only has one CPU PCIe slot so I can't effectively put the GPU I want to pass thru in a secondary slot (every other slot is PCH). I used the same setup on this computer as I have on my other X299 Intel computer (which also has a 1660 passthru in its primary slot) and this one doesn't work. I'm seeing many posts online about a BIOS that broke this support, but then there are other posts that say the "AMD ComboPI1.0.0.4 Patch B (SMU v46.54)" update in the BIOS fixed their passthru issues. That was introduced on this motherboard 2019-10-30. The board shipped with 2019-11-07 and I updated it to 2020-01-13. Neither the shipped nor updated BIOS work for this. I am at a loss for how to debug this without acquiring more GPUs, a different motherboard, etc. The VM works with a VNC head (in which I installed Windows half-way through my debugging) but will not use the GPU. I also tried downloading a VBIOS for this card and trying that to no avail. Has anybody had luck with this CPU/Motherboard/GPU combination? Or do you have suggests on what to try? My configuration is attached. NewPC.xml
  2. When I type in `\\10.10.81.2` Windows tells me it cannot connect. When I ping that IP or go to it in the browser, they both work.
  3. I'm new to unRAID. Right now, I have two servers using various hardware I have. Let call them: - Server A - my file server - Server B - my VM server, which is running, among other things, a Win10 VM with my 1080 Ti passthru and bridged networking I have many "computers," both real and otherwise, but for now I'll reference two: - Computer X - the aforementioned Win10 (Enterprise) VM - Computer Y - a real Dell laptop, also running Win10 (Home) So here's the deal. Computer X and Computer Y can access the SMB shares on Server A, but only Computer Y can access the SMB shares on Server B. Computer X, despite being a VM on the very hardware, cannot access the server. Some notes: - There's no appreciable difference in server configuration (both have running arrays, both have file shares, both have user accounts, etc) - The subnets all work out (I'm 10.10/16, my Dell and Win10 are in the DHCP pool at 10.10.10/22, at the unRAID servers are 10.10.81.x) - There appears to be no difference in Windows security settings - Computer X can ping Server B and access the web administration interface, so there is connectivity / routing So... Why can't Computer X talk to Server B?
  4. Enabling MSI for the audio card worked - thanks everybody! It wasn't clear from the wiki that this had to be done for both the GPU (which was done automatically) and the HDMI sound output device too.
  5. I have not. I did not know there was such a thing. I just found that here. However, that section says it tells me how to do it, then proceeds to tell me how to check if... MSI is... used? It doesn't actually tell me if I need to perform the "fix" or how to fix it. For reference, my `lspci` is showing this for the 1080 card: Capabilities: [68] MSI: Enable+ Count=1/1 Maskable- 64bit+ So, if enabled and used is what's it's supposed to be, then I don't need the MSI fix.
  6. My host is an EVGA FTW-K X299 + i7-7820X with a Radeon 580 RX in the primary x16 slot and a Nvidia GTX 1080 Ti in the secondary x8 (CPU, not PCH) slot running unRAID 6.8.2. My client is Windows 10 Enterprise with the Nvidia card passed through (both audio and video) and 4 [real] cores passed through. The VM's configuration is attached, though apparently Windows tacked on a .txt extension... The computer runs fine. I'm running 4k@60Hz to a Samsung TV, and everything is responsive. There are no color/pixel aberrations, no choppiness, etc; when I move the mouse around, move windows around, type, scroll in the web, everything works wonderfully. I ran the benchmark from userbenchmark and got slightly slower RAM performance but nearly identical 4-core CPU performance and GPU performance as this same computer gets bare-metal (but with the 1080 Ti in the primary x16 slot). Clearly something is working right (though, interestingly, this computer seems to generally be slower than expected - the GPU isn't performing as well as this card is expected to, but the key is that it's the same as the bare-metal computer, and I played Borderlands 3 at 4k on very high settings with only minor degredation, let alone streaming a video). If I open a game... Like Portal 2 (let alone Borderlands 3)... or if I play a video on YouTube, I get horribly choppy video (probably 2 fps) and stuttery/choppy audio. This happens whether it's full-screen or a small window, and happens to all audio, and it doesn't matter if it's in Chrome or a video from a local network server played with Windows media player, or if it's a system alert sound, whether it's HD or SD, etc - they're all... slow. Here's a good video shot at a bad angle of the behavior. Why is this an issue? I have no idea what is causing this and why it's so limited to video playbacks. VMConfig.xml.txt
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