hi all!
This script is no long maintained, however i do have a friend who has made a far better solution to this problem!
please see https://github.com/totallynotinteresting/crossover for more info :)
if possible could you please star his repo too?
| <# Workaround for NVIDIA's DLSS4 whitelisting | |
| -------- WHAT IS THE BACKSTORY? -------- | |
| DLSS4 was launched alongside the RTX 5000 series and comprise several new and interesting | |
| features, f.e. additional presets for Super Resolution, using a newer Transformer model. | |
| Arguably these features increase image quality significantly. To various degrees these | |
| features are also available for older RTX cards, and older games using DLSS3/2. |
hi all!
This script is no long maintained, however i do have a friend who has made a far better solution to this problem!
please see https://github.com/totallynotinteresting/crossover for more info :)
if possible could you please star his repo too?
In the following gist I'm going to guide you through the process of installing and booting an entire linux distribution with full desktop environment just like you would have with a classical VM, but with much better performance and much worse isolation :)
The reason why I did this was mainly because it's cool, but also to test new distros with decent graphics performance without actually booting them on my PC.
If you "try this at home" just keep in mind a container is not as secure as a VM, and some of the option we're going to explore will weaken container isolation from "a bit risky" to "totally unsafe" depending on what you choose.
Also, we're going to use systemd-nspawn for containers as it's probably the best fit for our use case and can also boot any linux partition without needing to prepare an apposite container image.
Less go!