- #VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER UPDATE#
- #VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER WINDOWS 10#
- #VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER SOFTWARE#
I probably won’t dig too far into this, as this isn’t my intended use case, but my 144hz monitor was only processing these games at 32hz via RDP. I tested a small Steam game, “Subnautica: Below Zero” and was able to get much better fps and a much better experience via RDP. The Not Lawlors do not consider it playable, but I was technically able to play it. For example, I could run Genshin Impact and get about 42 fps with a not-so-great visual experience–but it was absolutely playable.
#VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER SOFTWARE#
I could run software and see that it was using the GPU to process the graphics. Third, if there is no (functional) monitor connected to the GPU, I was able to use RDP to connect to the VM. RDP Only Works when Not Connected to a Display I don’t know why, yet, but I do plan to go figure it out and I will write about it when that happens. I have a new Dell U2719D Monitor that came with a DisplayPort cable that did not give me signal on any of the three ports on my GPU. Second, after many hours of head pounding against hard surfaces, I figured out the DisplayPort(s) never give me output.
#VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER WINDOWS 10#
Interestingly though, I can still use the remote desktop functionality in Windows 10 Pro and connect to the desktop remotely just fine that way. I can usually see an image of the desktop in the console, but it is not interactive and it doesn’t come up right away.
vSphere Console Black and/or Unresponsiveįirst, when this WORKS PROPERLY (properly meaning as I wanted it to, of course), I lost my ability to view the VM through the vSphere Console. Very Important LessonsĪfter going through the process of getting this to work, I learned some very important things. It’s possible that I left something out because this whole process took me several days of trial and error.
#VMWARE ESXI 6.7 NVIDIA VGPU DRIVER UPDATE#
But, it didn’t get me all the way to success. I used this link to guide me in my effort to passthrough my GPU in VMWare ESXi to an existing Windows 10 Pro VM that I intend to use for gaming. My NVIDIA GTX 1060 (6GB) GPU seems to be installed properly in the PowerEdge T640, although I have no way to test it.