Evan Lezar d4e21fdd10 Add devRoot option to CDI api
A driverRoot defines both the driver library root and the
root for device nodes. In the case of preinstalled drivers or
the driver container, these are equal, but in cases such as GKE
they do not match. In this case, drivers are extracted to a folder
and devices exist at the root /.

The changes here add a devRoot option to the nvcdi API that allows the
parent of /dev to be specified explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Evan Lezar <elezar@nvidia.com>
2023-11-20 21:29:35 +01:00
2023-10-31 15:25:41 +01:00
2023-11-20 21:29:35 +01:00
2023-11-20 21:29:35 +01:00
2023-11-20 10:57:35 +01:00
2023-05-10 13:10:10 +02:00
2023-02-13 16:09:45 +01:00
2023-07-17 16:28:31 +02:00
2023-11-20 10:57:35 +01:00
2021-05-18 11:25:52 +02:00
2023-10-31 15:25:41 +01:00
2022-04-12 14:52:38 +02:00

NVIDIA Container Toolkit

GitHub license Documentation Package repository

nvidia-container-stack

Introduction

The NVIDIA Container Toolkit allows users to build and run GPU accelerated containers. The toolkit includes a container runtime library and utilities to automatically configure containers to leverage NVIDIA GPUs.

Product documentation including an architecture overview, platform support, and installation and usage guides can be found in the documentation repository.

Getting Started

Make sure you have installed the NVIDIA driver for your Linux Distribution Note that you do not need to install the CUDA Toolkit on the host system, but the NVIDIA driver needs to be installed

For instructions on getting started with the NVIDIA Container Toolkit, refer to the installation guide.

Usage

The user guide provides information on the configuration and command line options available when running GPU containers with Docker.

Issues and Contributing

Checkout the Contributing document!

Description
No description provided
Readme 20 MiB
Languages
Go 88.4%
Shell 5.9%
C 3.3%
Makefile 1.6%
Dockerfile 0.7%
Other 0.1%