The system compatibility report in Premiere Pro scans your system and lets you know if you need to update your drivers. Use the instructions in this document to update your Nvidia drivers for macOS.
Note:
If you are logged in as a Guest or Standard User, you cannot install the driver. Some organizations do not allow users to regulate what they install and manipulate system and application settings. Contact your system admin for help with installing the driver in such a situation.
Requirements for CUDA 9.2 on macOS
Operating system | macOS 10.13.6 [most recent version of High Sierra] |
Premiere Pro version | Premiere Pro version 13.1.x or earlier. |
GPU | Current NVIDIA GPU with at least 4 GB of memory |
Display driver | NVIDIA display driver version 387.10.10.10.40.105 or late |
Before you start
- Create a backup of your boot volume. For more information, see Back up your Mac with Time Machine.
- Identify your NVIDIA GPU make and model before downloading the appropriate driver.
Upgrade to CUDA 9.2 on macOS
Close all running Adobe applications before proceeding.
You must update the NVIDIA display driver before updating CUDA. Check your macOS build number and download the corresponding driver, using the following table.
Open the downloaded PKG file to begin installation.
Restart your machine when installation is complete, even if the setup does not prompt you to do so.
After the display driver is updated, use download the qualified CUDA installer DMG from this location.
Open the downloaded DMG and double click the CUDADriver.pkg file to begin installation.
When installation completes, restart your machine even if the setup does not prompt you to do so.
Yes, but the Nvidia page I reference is about installing a different driver. Also, the Adobe page wants you to uninstall the Nvidia driver [step 2] BEFORE selecting and downloading the new driver [steps 3-8], which is different from the instructions on the Nvidia page I referenced. Should we follow the Adobe instructions or the Nvidia ones, and what are the pros and cons?
Also, how does your PC talk to your monitor or know what your resolution [etc] settings are if you uninstall the driver? I assume Windows must have some sort of generic default drivers, but which one knows your monitor and resolution settings?
Looks as some members with dedicated graphics controllers and naturally integrated video controllers are receiving system compatibility reports about out of date drivers for the integrated video control, that on their systems are not used by Lightroom Classic.
They are finding that unhelpful and annoying.
See post: //community.adobe.com/t5/lightroom-classic-discussions/lightroom-classic-11-5-incorrectly-reporting-outdated-graphics-driver-on-dell-latitude-laptop/td-p/13149081
hmm, I am clearly Adobe Community challenged, thought I posed as Bug, clearly I missed a step.
Ahh, and now moved to Ideas. Ok. Treat as not a bug, apparently as designed, so treat as an Idea, a request for change.
Looks as some members with dedicated graphics controllers and naturally integrated video controllers are receiving system compatibility reports about out of date drivers for the integrated video control, that on their systems are not used by Lightroom Classic.
They are finding that unhelpful and annoying.
See post: //community.adobe.com/t5/lightroom-classic-discussions/lightroom-classic-11-5-incorrectly-reporting-outdated-graphics-driver-on-dell-latitude-laptop/td-p/13149081
hmm, I am clearly Adobe Community challenged, thought I posed as Bug, clearly I missed a step.
Ahh, and now moved to Ideas. Ok. Treat as not a bug, apparently as designed, so treat as an Idea, a request for change.