krips89
krips89

Reputation: 1743

Where did CUDA get installed on Ubuntu 14.04 on my computer?

I'm trying to install CUDA 7.5 in my ubuntu 14.04. I followed everything in this guide (installation through package): http://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/7.5/Prod/docs/sidebar/CUDA_Installation_Guide_Linux.pdf until post build section. Mainly, by running the following commands:

sudo dpkg -i cuda-repo-ubuntu1404-7-5-local_7.5-18_amd64.deb
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install cuda

The thing is the folder /usr/local/cuda* does not exist after successful CUDA installation. Further trying to install cuda says that it is already the newest version.

sudo apt-get install cuda
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree       
Reading state information... Done
cuda is already the newest version.

ls /usr/local/cuda*
ls: cannot access /usr/local/cuda*: No such file or directory

It also does not find nvcc.

nvcc
The program 'nvcc' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt-get install nvidia-cuda-toolkit

sudo find /usr/ -name nvcc
<no output>

What is wrong?

Upvotes: 67

Views: 239114

Answers (5)

Sajjad Aemmi
Sajjad Aemmi

Reputation: 2607

just run following command:

which nvcc

Upvotes: 3

Bikash Gyawali
Bikash Gyawali

Reputation: 1048

I tracked the CUDA installation folder to /usr/lib/nvidia-cuda-toolkit. How? I used locate nvcc.

I had installed NVIDIA driver using the Software and Updates --> Additional Drivers followed by CUDA Toolkit installation using sudo apt install nvidia-cuda-toolkit on Ubuntu 20.04. nvcc --version was working fine but when it came to verifying cuDNN installation (https://docs.nvidia.com/deeplearning/cudnn/install-guide/index.html#verify), it was looking for the usr/local/cuda folder and failed.

I, therefore, created a symlink usr/local/cuda to /usr/lib/nvidia-cuda-toolkit as so: ln -s /usr/lib/nvidia-cuda-toolkit/ /usr/local/cuda.

Also added /usr/lib/nvidia-cuda-toolkit/libdevice to $LD_LIBRARY_PATH and /usr/lib/nvidia-cuda-toolkit/bin to$PATH variables.

All is working fine now.

Upvotes: 27

krips89
krips89

Reputation: 1743

I solved (ditched actually) the problem by using 'Runfile method' for installing. I could get the latest nvidia driver installed with the package method explained above, but the problem seemed to be the cuda toolkit.

Installing the driver through Runfile is pain. So, at the prompt I chose to install just 'cuda toolkit 7.5' and all the files got copied to /usr/local/cuda* directory properly.

Upvotes: 15

Martin Thoma
Martin Thoma

Reputation: 136177

Usually, it is /usr/local/cuda. If this is not the case, you can try to locate cuda. If you want to find directories only, run

locate cuda | grep /cuda$

or

find / -type d -name cuda 2>/dev/null

For me, it turned out to be in /opt/cuda-7.5

Upvotes: 69

sam x
sam x

Reputation: 1

I had the same issue when upgrading to cuda 8.0. I solved it by changing the nvidia driver back to X.Org and then reinstall it from software& updates. You might want to delete old cuda files as well. I was able to reinstall cuda correctly after this.

Upvotes: 0

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