CUDA#
CUDA-only packages are stored in the cudaPackages packages set. This set
includes the cudatoolkit, portions of the toolkit in separate derivations,
cudnn, cutensor and nccl.
A package set is available for each CUDA version, so for example
cudaPackages_11_6. Within each set is a matching version of the above listed
packages. Additionally, other versions of the packages that are packaged and
compatible are available as well. For example, there can be a
cudaPackages.cudnn_8_3 package.
To use one or more CUDA packages in an expression, give the expression a cudaPackages parameter, and in case CUDA is optional
When using callPackage, you can choose to pass in a different variant, e.g.
when a different version of the toolkit suffices
If another version of say cudnn or cutensor is needed, you can override the
package set to make it the default. This guarantees you get a consistent package
set.
mypkg = let
cudaPackages = cudaPackages_11_5.overrideScope (final: prev: {
cudnn = prev.cudnn_8_3;
}});
in callPackage { inherit cudaPackages; };
The CUDA NVCC compiler requires flags to determine which hardware you want to target for in terms of SASS (real hardware) or PTX (JIT kernels).
Nixpkgs tries to target support real architecture defaults based on the CUDA toolkit version with PTX support for future hardware. Experienced users may optimize this configuration for a variety of reasons such as reducing binary size and compile time, supporting legacy hardware, or optimizing for specific hardware.
You may provide capabilities to add support or reduce binary size through
config using cudaCapabilities = [ "6.0" "7.0" ]; and
cudaForwardCompat = true; if you want PTX support for future hardware.
Please consult GPUs supported for your specific card(s).
Library maintainers should consult NVCC Docs and release notes for their software package.
Adding a new CUDA release#
WARNING
This section of the docs is still very much in progress. Feedback is welcome in GitHub Issues tagging @NixOS/cuda-maintainers or on Matrix.
The CUDA Toolkit is a suite of CUDA libraries and software meant to provide a development environment for CUDA-accelerated applications. Until the release of CUDA 11.4, NVIDIA had only made the CUDA Toolkit available as a multi-gigabyte runfile installer, which we provide through the cudaPackages.cudatoolkit attribute. From CUDA 11.4 and onwards, NVIDIA has also provided CUDA redistributables (“CUDA-redist”): individually packaged CUDA Toolkit components meant to facilitate redistribution and inclusion in downstream projects. These packages are available in the cudaPackages package set.
All new projects should use the CUDA redistributables available in cudaPackages in place of cudaPackages.cudatoolkit, as they are much easier to maintain and update.
Updating CUDA redistributables#
- Go to NVIDIA's index of CUDA redistributables: https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/redist/
- Make a note of the new version of CUDA available.
- Run
nix run github:connorbaker/cuda-redist-find-features -- \
download-manifests \
--log-level DEBUG \
--version <newest CUDA version> \
https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/redist \
./pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/manifests
This will download a copy of the manifest for the new version of CUDA. 4. Run
nix run github:connorbaker/cuda-redist-find-features -- \
process-manifests \
--log-level DEBUG \
--version <newest CUDA version> \
https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/redist \
./pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/manifests
This will generate a redistrib_features_<newest CUDA version>.json file in the same directory as the manifest.
5. Update the cudaVersionMap attribute set in pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/extension.nix.
Updating cuTensor#
- Repeat the steps present in Updating CUDA redistributables with the following changes:
- Use the index of cuTensor redistributables: https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cutensor/redist
- Use the newest version of cuTensor available instead of the newest version of CUDA.
- Use
pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cutensor/manifestsinstead ofpkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/manifests. - Skip the step of updating
cudaVersionMapinpkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/extension.nix.
Updating supported compilers and GPUs#
- Update
nvcc-compatibilities.nixinpkgs/development/cuda-modules/to include the newest release of NVCC, as well as any newly supported host compilers. - Update
gpus.nixinpkgs/development/cuda-modules/to include any new GPUs supported by the new release of CUDA.
Updating the CUDA Toolkit runfile installer#
WARNING
While the CUDA Toolkit runfile installer is still available in Nixpkgs as the
cudaPackages.cudatoolkitattribute, its use is not recommended and should it be considered deprecated. Please migrate to the CUDA redistributables provided by thecudaPackagespackage set.To ensure packages relying on the CUDA Toolkit runfile installer continue to build, it will continue to be updated until a migration path is available.
- Go to NVIDIA's CUDA Toolkit runfile installer download page: https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-downloads
-
Select the appropriate OS, architecture, distribution, and version, and installer type.
-
For example: Linux, x86_64, Ubuntu, 22.04, runfile (local)
-
NOTE: Typically, we use the Ubuntu runfile. It is unclear if the runfile for other distributions will work.
-
Take the link provided by the installer instructions on the webpage after selecting the installer type and get its hash by running:
- Update
pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cudatoolkit/releases.nixto include the release.
Updating the CUDA package set#
-
Include a new
cudaPackages_<major>_<minor>package set inpkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix. -
NOTE: Changing the default CUDA package set should occur in a separate PR, allowing time for additional testing.
-
Successfully build the closure of the new package set, updating
pkgs/development/cuda-modules/cuda/overrides.nixas needed. Below are some common failures:
| Unable to ... | During ... | Reason | Solution | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Find headers | configurePhase or buildPhase |
Missing dependency on a dev output |
Add the missing dependency | The dev output typically contain the headers |
| Find libraries | configurePhase |
Missing dependency on a dev output |
Add the missing dependency | The dev output typically contain CMake configuration files |
| Find libraries | buildPhase or patchelf |
Missing dependency on a lib or static output |
Add the missing dependency | The lib or static output typically contain the libraries |
In the scenario you are unable to run the resulting binary: this is arguably the most complicated as it could be any combination of the previous reasons. This type of failure typically occurs when a library attempts to load or open a library it depends on that it does not declare in its DT_NEEDED section. As a first step, ensure that dependencies are patched with cudaPackages.autoAddOpenGLRunpath. Failing that, try running the application with nixGL or a similar wrapper tool. If that works, it likely means that the application is attempting to load a library that is not in the RPATH or RUNPATH of the binary.