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Check what changes in
lspci
command between not having the GPU connected vs. Having it connected.I am suspecting that your PCI-E bandwidth is getting exhausted once the kernel activates your GPU.
Edit: Although I could be wrong about this. So makes sense to try passing "nomodeset" to your kernel parameters and see if that changes anything.
Ok. I’ll check it out.
Let’s say it is exhausted… what will get me more bandwidth? CPU or mobo..?
Only other pci-e card in at the moment is 16 line HBA seems to be basically 2 cards sandwiched on one board)…
Possible something on your motherboard has PCIe lanes that are dedicated to GPU when it’s slotted, otherwise they can be used for other devices?
For example here’s a post about m.2 slots that, when used, affect the PCI on a particular board. May be worth checking your boards manual to see if there’s something similar.
https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/questions-about-a-mb-im-looking-at-asrock-z790-pg-riptide.3787003/
Try disconnecting everything including the extra board.
It’s late. I’ll have to pull the card and re run tomorrow. But here’s with the GPU in:
It’s an i7-14700 and an ASRock z690 extreme. I’m actually hoping to put a second GPU in the last PCIe slot so I can let proxmox use the iGPU, pass the 3060 into a Unix moonlight gaming VM, and pass an RX590 into a hackintosh VM.
I had an issue with an ASrock Tiachi where if I enabled virtualization, the network would disappear entirely. May want to check for FW updates for your board. I had nothing but issues with the shitty BIOS and even had to upgrade my CPU sooner than I wanted to do the update.
Make sure your CPU is still supported by the update.
Aren't the PCIe lanes directly connected to the CPU? So the connections would be rerouted in hardware to connect to the GPU?
I am not the poster but I am curious if you know what maybe happening on a hardware level.
There's generally one or two slots connected directly to the CPU running in x16 or x8 if there's two and both are connected, 4 lanes linking the CPU to the chipset, and the rest of the slots connect to the chipset and share that same x4 link. If your cpu has 24 lanes (Ryzen do/did a few years ago, Intel might but didn't a few years ago), the remaining 4 lanes usually go to an NVMe slot