Terrible screen tearing on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS with Nvidia proprietary driver












9














So I installed Ubuntu about a week ago after finally getting around to sorting out my partitions. Everything has gone great except that I get screen tearing on anything that goes fullscreen. I've searched around and tried loads of different solutions but none have worked. My GFX card is a nVidia GT 650M, I hope someone has a solution.










share|improve this question
























  • Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 11:54










  • The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
    – user292541
    Jun 11 '14 at 12:04










  • Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:17












  • Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:22
















9














So I installed Ubuntu about a week ago after finally getting around to sorting out my partitions. Everything has gone great except that I get screen tearing on anything that goes fullscreen. I've searched around and tried loads of different solutions but none have worked. My GFX card is a nVidia GT 650M, I hope someone has a solution.










share|improve this question
























  • Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 11:54










  • The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
    – user292541
    Jun 11 '14 at 12:04










  • Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:17












  • Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:22














9












9








9


1





So I installed Ubuntu about a week ago after finally getting around to sorting out my partitions. Everything has gone great except that I get screen tearing on anything that goes fullscreen. I've searched around and tried loads of different solutions but none have worked. My GFX card is a nVidia GT 650M, I hope someone has a solution.










share|improve this question















So I installed Ubuntu about a week ago after finally getting around to sorting out my partitions. Everything has gone great except that I get screen tearing on anything that goes fullscreen. I've searched around and tried loads of different solutions but none have worked. My GFX card is a nVidia GT 650M, I hope someone has a solution.







nvidia 14.04 screen tearing






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 11 '14 at 20:12









bain

9,09322942




9,09322942










asked Jun 11 '14 at 11:13









user292541

4612




4612












  • Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 11:54










  • The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
    – user292541
    Jun 11 '14 at 12:04










  • Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:17












  • Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:22


















  • Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 11:54










  • The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
    – user292541
    Jun 11 '14 at 12:04










  • Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:17












  • Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
    – bain
    Jun 11 '14 at 20:22
















Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 11:54




Are you using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers?
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 11:54












The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
– user292541
Jun 11 '14 at 12:04




The propriety drivers, I had screen tearing on non-full screen video with the Nouveau drivers.
– user292541
Jun 11 '14 at 12:04












Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 20:17






Check vsync is set in Nvidia X Server / OpenGL settings. There is a suggestion in Seeking Information About Ubuntu 14.04 + nVidia screen tearing / vsync bug. And Have tearing (no Vsync) in movies
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 20:17














Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 20:22




Also How do I stop video tearing? (Nvidia prop driver, non-compositing window manager)
– bain
Jun 11 '14 at 20:22










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















0














Screen tearing is a very annoying problem and can be caused by different things.
Check if your vsync is enabled and check whether your monitor's refresh frequency is set to the same value as the software value.
A quick search online shows that the NVidia 650 has this problem for quite a few people. I advise you to search around and see what works for you. Different people report different methods of dealing with it.



It greatly depends on the vendor of the GPU, what other hardware, drivers and settings you are using.






share|improve this answer





























    0














    First install CompizConfig-Settings-Manager by



    sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager



    Open CompizConfig-Settings-Manager find Composite and check it. Now Click Composite and uncheck the box of Unredirect Fullscreen Windows.
    Close CompizConfig-Settings-Manager.






    share|improve this answer





























      0














      If you are still having the issues with video tearing using your Nvidia card you can run the following in a terminal:
      nvidia-settings --assign CurrentMetaMode="nvidia-auto-select +0+0 { ForceFullCompositionPipeline = On }"



      Worked great on a few of my machines running on Ubuntu 16.04.



      Assuming you are using one video card, Alternatively you can try this config file edit in the file located at: /etc/X11/xorg.conf



      Section "Device"
      Identifier "Device0"
      Driver "nvidia"
      VendorName "NVIDIA Corporation"
      BoardName "GeForce GTX 650"
      Option "RegistryDwords" "PerfLevelSrc=0x2222"
      Option "TripleBuffer" "True"
      EndSection



      You can change the performance level value to "PerfLevelSrc=0x2233" if your video card does not like the full performance setting above.






      share|improve this answer





























        0














        This may Also help...

        Do a complete removal of existing Nvidia drivers and Config's.

        I use Terminal booting to the grub recover option in the boot menu. Then an apt-get purge method, but you might want to look this up as I accidently put a * at he the end of my command and 'FURAR'ed my system once!!!

        I was there after able to install Nvidia again in a normal boot with good results. I also added the Nvidia control panel (nvidia-settings) to get better control over the card functions. Seems too much is left behind and not removed installing the drivers over the previous drivers, thus causing problems and having no Idea where you are with the drivers,

        Much said about this in the search results...Perhaps too much!!!... and not very concise.






        share|improve this answer





















        • This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
          – Sumeet Deshmukh
          May 5 '17 at 15:04






        • 1




          This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
          – James N.
          May 7 '17 at 16:22











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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        0














        Screen tearing is a very annoying problem and can be caused by different things.
        Check if your vsync is enabled and check whether your monitor's refresh frequency is set to the same value as the software value.
        A quick search online shows that the NVidia 650 has this problem for quite a few people. I advise you to search around and see what works for you. Different people report different methods of dealing with it.



        It greatly depends on the vendor of the GPU, what other hardware, drivers and settings you are using.






        share|improve this answer


























          0














          Screen tearing is a very annoying problem and can be caused by different things.
          Check if your vsync is enabled and check whether your monitor's refresh frequency is set to the same value as the software value.
          A quick search online shows that the NVidia 650 has this problem for quite a few people. I advise you to search around and see what works for you. Different people report different methods of dealing with it.



          It greatly depends on the vendor of the GPU, what other hardware, drivers and settings you are using.






          share|improve this answer
























            0












            0








            0






            Screen tearing is a very annoying problem and can be caused by different things.
            Check if your vsync is enabled and check whether your monitor's refresh frequency is set to the same value as the software value.
            A quick search online shows that the NVidia 650 has this problem for quite a few people. I advise you to search around and see what works for you. Different people report different methods of dealing with it.



            It greatly depends on the vendor of the GPU, what other hardware, drivers and settings you are using.






            share|improve this answer












            Screen tearing is a very annoying problem and can be caused by different things.
            Check if your vsync is enabled and check whether your monitor's refresh frequency is set to the same value as the software value.
            A quick search online shows that the NVidia 650 has this problem for quite a few people. I advise you to search around and see what works for you. Different people report different methods of dealing with it.



            It greatly depends on the vendor of the GPU, what other hardware, drivers and settings you are using.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jun 11 '14 at 13:57









            Jakke

            532213




            532213

























                0














                First install CompizConfig-Settings-Manager by



                sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager



                Open CompizConfig-Settings-Manager find Composite and check it. Now Click Composite and uncheck the box of Unredirect Fullscreen Windows.
                Close CompizConfig-Settings-Manager.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0














                  First install CompizConfig-Settings-Manager by



                  sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager



                  Open CompizConfig-Settings-Manager find Composite and check it. Now Click Composite and uncheck the box of Unredirect Fullscreen Windows.
                  Close CompizConfig-Settings-Manager.






                  share|improve this answer
























                    0












                    0








                    0






                    First install CompizConfig-Settings-Manager by



                    sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager



                    Open CompizConfig-Settings-Manager find Composite and check it. Now Click Composite and uncheck the box of Unredirect Fullscreen Windows.
                    Close CompizConfig-Settings-Manager.






                    share|improve this answer












                    First install CompizConfig-Settings-Manager by



                    sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager



                    Open CompizConfig-Settings-Manager find Composite and check it. Now Click Composite and uncheck the box of Unredirect Fullscreen Windows.
                    Close CompizConfig-Settings-Manager.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Jan 12 '17 at 10:19









                    Talha F.

                    417




                    417























                        0














                        If you are still having the issues with video tearing using your Nvidia card you can run the following in a terminal:
                        nvidia-settings --assign CurrentMetaMode="nvidia-auto-select +0+0 { ForceFullCompositionPipeline = On }"



                        Worked great on a few of my machines running on Ubuntu 16.04.



                        Assuming you are using one video card, Alternatively you can try this config file edit in the file located at: /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                        Section "Device"
                        Identifier "Device0"
                        Driver "nvidia"
                        VendorName "NVIDIA Corporation"
                        BoardName "GeForce GTX 650"
                        Option "RegistryDwords" "PerfLevelSrc=0x2222"
                        Option "TripleBuffer" "True"
                        EndSection



                        You can change the performance level value to "PerfLevelSrc=0x2233" if your video card does not like the full performance setting above.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          0














                          If you are still having the issues with video tearing using your Nvidia card you can run the following in a terminal:
                          nvidia-settings --assign CurrentMetaMode="nvidia-auto-select +0+0 { ForceFullCompositionPipeline = On }"



                          Worked great on a few of my machines running on Ubuntu 16.04.



                          Assuming you are using one video card, Alternatively you can try this config file edit in the file located at: /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                          Section "Device"
                          Identifier "Device0"
                          Driver "nvidia"
                          VendorName "NVIDIA Corporation"
                          BoardName "GeForce GTX 650"
                          Option "RegistryDwords" "PerfLevelSrc=0x2222"
                          Option "TripleBuffer" "True"
                          EndSection



                          You can change the performance level value to "PerfLevelSrc=0x2233" if your video card does not like the full performance setting above.






                          share|improve this answer
























                            0












                            0








                            0






                            If you are still having the issues with video tearing using your Nvidia card you can run the following in a terminal:
                            nvidia-settings --assign CurrentMetaMode="nvidia-auto-select +0+0 { ForceFullCompositionPipeline = On }"



                            Worked great on a few of my machines running on Ubuntu 16.04.



                            Assuming you are using one video card, Alternatively you can try this config file edit in the file located at: /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                            Section "Device"
                            Identifier "Device0"
                            Driver "nvidia"
                            VendorName "NVIDIA Corporation"
                            BoardName "GeForce GTX 650"
                            Option "RegistryDwords" "PerfLevelSrc=0x2222"
                            Option "TripleBuffer" "True"
                            EndSection



                            You can change the performance level value to "PerfLevelSrc=0x2233" if your video card does not like the full performance setting above.






                            share|improve this answer












                            If you are still having the issues with video tearing using your Nvidia card you can run the following in a terminal:
                            nvidia-settings --assign CurrentMetaMode="nvidia-auto-select +0+0 { ForceFullCompositionPipeline = On }"



                            Worked great on a few of my machines running on Ubuntu 16.04.



                            Assuming you are using one video card, Alternatively you can try this config file edit in the file located at: /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                            Section "Device"
                            Identifier "Device0"
                            Driver "nvidia"
                            VendorName "NVIDIA Corporation"
                            BoardName "GeForce GTX 650"
                            Option "RegistryDwords" "PerfLevelSrc=0x2222"
                            Option "TripleBuffer" "True"
                            EndSection



                            You can change the performance level value to "PerfLevelSrc=0x2233" if your video card does not like the full performance setting above.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jan 27 '17 at 9:59









                            MTND G

                            213




                            213























                                0














                                This may Also help...

                                Do a complete removal of existing Nvidia drivers and Config's.

                                I use Terminal booting to the grub recover option in the boot menu. Then an apt-get purge method, but you might want to look this up as I accidently put a * at he the end of my command and 'FURAR'ed my system once!!!

                                I was there after able to install Nvidia again in a normal boot with good results. I also added the Nvidia control panel (nvidia-settings) to get better control over the card functions. Seems too much is left behind and not removed installing the drivers over the previous drivers, thus causing problems and having no Idea where you are with the drivers,

                                Much said about this in the search results...Perhaps too much!!!... and not very concise.






                                share|improve this answer





















                                • This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                  – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                  May 5 '17 at 15:04






                                • 1




                                  This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                  – James N.
                                  May 7 '17 at 16:22
















                                0














                                This may Also help...

                                Do a complete removal of existing Nvidia drivers and Config's.

                                I use Terminal booting to the grub recover option in the boot menu. Then an apt-get purge method, but you might want to look this up as I accidently put a * at he the end of my command and 'FURAR'ed my system once!!!

                                I was there after able to install Nvidia again in a normal boot with good results. I also added the Nvidia control panel (nvidia-settings) to get better control over the card functions. Seems too much is left behind and not removed installing the drivers over the previous drivers, thus causing problems and having no Idea where you are with the drivers,

                                Much said about this in the search results...Perhaps too much!!!... and not very concise.






                                share|improve this answer





















                                • This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                  – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                  May 5 '17 at 15:04






                                • 1




                                  This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                  – James N.
                                  May 7 '17 at 16:22














                                0












                                0








                                0






                                This may Also help...

                                Do a complete removal of existing Nvidia drivers and Config's.

                                I use Terminal booting to the grub recover option in the boot menu. Then an apt-get purge method, but you might want to look this up as I accidently put a * at he the end of my command and 'FURAR'ed my system once!!!

                                I was there after able to install Nvidia again in a normal boot with good results. I also added the Nvidia control panel (nvidia-settings) to get better control over the card functions. Seems too much is left behind and not removed installing the drivers over the previous drivers, thus causing problems and having no Idea where you are with the drivers,

                                Much said about this in the search results...Perhaps too much!!!... and not very concise.






                                share|improve this answer












                                This may Also help...

                                Do a complete removal of existing Nvidia drivers and Config's.

                                I use Terminal booting to the grub recover option in the boot menu. Then an apt-get purge method, but you might want to look this up as I accidently put a * at he the end of my command and 'FURAR'ed my system once!!!

                                I was there after able to install Nvidia again in a normal boot with good results. I also added the Nvidia control panel (nvidia-settings) to get better control over the card functions. Seems too much is left behind and not removed installing the drivers over the previous drivers, thus causing problems and having no Idea where you are with the drivers,

                                Much said about this in the search results...Perhaps too much!!!... and not very concise.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered May 5 '17 at 14:23









                                James N.

                                196




                                196












                                • This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                  – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                  May 5 '17 at 15:04






                                • 1




                                  This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                  – James N.
                                  May 7 '17 at 16:22


















                                • This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                  – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                  May 5 '17 at 15:04






                                • 1




                                  This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                  – James N.
                                  May 7 '17 at 16:22
















                                This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                May 5 '17 at 15:04




                                This is not a well formatted answer, will you just edit it to be better understandable?
                                – Sumeet Deshmukh
                                May 5 '17 at 15:04




                                1




                                1




                                This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                – James N.
                                May 7 '17 at 16:22




                                This answer id somewhat broad because so much depends on What version and OS are used, Monitor and specific video card used, So my answer is as more of a starting point and would require the User to research their specifics. But in all cases the point was complete removal and install. However for me removal always meant doing this by the CLI by booting into the CLI and not in a graphical mode
                                – James N.
                                May 7 '17 at 16:22


















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