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⇱ Nouveau On NVIDIA Turing GPUs & Newer Will Now Prefer NVK+Zink For OpenGL - Phoronix


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Nouveau On NVIDIA Turing GPUs & Newer Will Now Prefer NVK+Zink For OpenGL

Written by Michael Larabel in Nouveau on 11 March 2025 at 12:40 PM EDT. 35 Comments
As a sign of the times for both the NVK open-source NVIDIA Vulkan driver within Mesa and the generic Zink OpenGL-on-Vulkan code, with next quarter's Mesa 25.1 release when using a NVIDIA Turing GPU or newer with the Nouveau driver stack it will now default to using Zink atop NVK for OpenGL rather than the existing NVC0 Gallium3D driver.

NVC0 Gallium3D is barely maintained these days especially compared to the actively-developed NVK driver within Mesa by Faith Ekstrand of Collabora and other open-source developers. Plus Zink has been showing its successes at large for working well across multiple hardware drivers, Imagination going the Vulkan-only route with their PowerVR driver to rely on Zink for OpenGL, and Mike Blumenkrantz of Valve really driving hard on Zink optimizations and fixes.

👁 Zink NVC0 landing


With this merge request in the process of being merged at the moment, Mesa 25.1 with Nouveau will load Zink as the OpenGL driver for Turing and newer and when on a supported kernel with DRM modifiers support. It's a logical move to make given the stagnation of the NVC0 driver. Most NVIDIA users will still be best off using the official NVIDIA Linux driver stack with proprietary OpenGL/Vulkan especially given the headaches with the current Nouveau kernel driver (though with time the NOVA kernel driver will hopefully take shape well and become a viable alternative) and now another win for Zink in the books.

Michael Larabel is the principal author of Phoronix.com and founded the site in 2004 with a focus on enriching the Linux hardware experience. Michael has written more than 20,000 articles covering the state of Linux hardware support, Linux performance, graphics drivers, and other topics. Michael is also the lead developer of the Phoronix Test Suite, Phoromatic, and OpenBenchmarking.org automated benchmarking software. He can be followed via Twitter, LinkedIn, or contacted via MichaelLarabel.com.