This is why, among others things, on Debian, it is highly not recommended to install a 3rd-party nvidia-driver, in order to avoid breaking Debian. And it's true for others critical system packages. The metapackage cuda-toolkit is highly tied to nvidia-driver and its version. Not to mention that you would have the same problem all over again each time you want to upgrade your driver. Yes, you could but that would not mean the CUDA Toolkit would work properly with your new driver, or even your system. Nvidia-cuda-toolkit/stable,now 8.0.44-4 amd64 Nvidia-cuda-doc/stable,stable,now 8.0.44-4 all Libnvidia-ptxjitcompiler1/now 384.130-1 amd64 [installed,upgradable libnvidia-compiler/nowģ84.130-1 amd64 libnvidia-fatbinaryloader/now 384.130-1 amd64 [installed,upgradable Glx-alternative-nvidia/now 0.8.3~deb9u1 amd64 [installed,upgradable Here is the output from apt list -installed |grep nvidia: So my question is: how can I remove the old nvidia driver but keep the cuda toolkit? which package should I uninstall? To install the new version I need unstall the old version first. Now I want to install new nvidia driver (v410) which is not available via apt. It seems nvidia driver (version 384) was also installed during the process. Cuda 8 was installed via nvidia-cuda-toolkit package.
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