MDN Posted August 4, 2021 Share Posted August 4, 2021 Hello everyone, please help me to unravel a "knot of thoughts" in my mind. Sometimes I need a binary answer to understand something and not the usual "it depends" that you read everywhere. Since yesterday I have spent many hours configuring GPU Passthrough. Thanks to Spaceinvader and various posts here on the forum, there was also a lot I could try. Since I have an NVIDIA GTX 1050TI, I also exported the VBIOS, edited it with the HEX editor and integrated it. The thing with the graphics card and sound card on the GPU was also edited via XML. Then I entered and changed things in syslinux.cfg, etc., etc. To get to the bottom of my problem, I installed a Windows 10 VM via VNC, then added the GPU and the VM also starts. BUT ... and now comes the catch: My screen says: No signal. Here is finaly my question: Does GPU Passthrough mean that I can connect a monitor to the graphics card and the VM's output can be seen (more or less natively) on it? Or do I always have to connect to the VM with a piece of software (RDP or similar)? For you professionals, the question might be trivial, but getting a YES or NO statement here would really help me. thx Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted August 4, 2021 Share Posted August 4, 2021 2 minutes ago, MDN said: Does GPU Passthrough mean that I can connect a monitor to the graphics card and the VM's output can be seen (more or less natively) on it? Yes 1 Quote Link to comment
MDN Posted August 4, 2021 Author Share Posted August 4, 2021 Thank you! Now I only have to figure out, why it's not working. But this answer helps me, because I'm on the right track. Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted August 4, 2021 Share Posted August 4, 2021 Some things to check. Video card outputs. Sometimes a card won't automatically switch to the output you are using. Try each port on the video card. Is it really starting properly? While you have it running with VNC, install a remote access software like nomachine or teamviewer, get that working properly under VNC, then when you switch outputs to the video card you can verify whether the VM fully started and just has a driver issue. Quote Link to comment
MDN Posted August 4, 2021 Author Share Posted August 4, 2021 I don't know what exactly happend, but after installing Windows updates I now have a picture on all 3 outputs (DVI, HDMI and DP) Quote Link to comment
Turnspit Posted August 5, 2021 Share Posted August 5, 2021 Sounds like a driver thingy. Had a similar issue occur, where before all the updates had finished, I had video output on my HDMI port, but not on my DP port. Quote Link to comment
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