GWE is a GTK system utility designed to provide information, control the fans and overclock your NVIDIA video card and graphics processor.
- Show general GPU stats (model name, driver version, gpu/memory/power usage, clocks, temps, etc)
- GPU and Memory overclock offset profiles
- Custom Fan curve profiles
- Change power limit
- Historical data graphs
If you don't like to reading manuals and/or you don't know what the Nvidia CoolBits are, you can watch the following How To made by Intelligent Gaming:
This is the preferred way to get GWE on any major distribution (Arch, Fedora, Linux Mint, openSUSE, Ubuntu, etc).
If you don't have Flatpak installed you can find step by step instructions here.
Make sure to have the Flathub remote added to the current user:
flatpak --user remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo
flatpak --user install flathub com.leinardi.gwe
flatpak update # needed to be sure to have the latest org.freedesktop.Platform.GL.nvidia
flatpak run com.leinardi.gwe
Currently Flatpak does not support Nvidia Beta drivers like 396.54.09 or 415.22.05.
Currently Flatpak does not support Bumblebee. If you want to use GWE with Bumblebee you need to install it from the source code.
Install the gwe
package from the AUR using your favourite helper, for example yay -S gwe
.
GWE avaliable in official Fedora repos for F31+: sudo dnf install gwe
For older Fedora releases you can use COPR package: sudo dnf copr enable atim/gwe -y && sudo dnf install gwe
Distro | pkg-config | Python 3.6+ | gobject-introspection | meson | ninja-build | appstream-util |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arch Linux | pkg-config | python | gobject-introspection | meson | ninja | appstream-glib |
Fedora | pkgconf-pkg-config | python3-devel | gobject-introspection-devel | meson | ninja-build | appstream-util |
OpenSUSE | pkgconf-pkg-config | python3-devel | gobject-introspection-devel | meson | ninja-build | appstream-glib |
Ubuntu | pkg-config | python3-dev | libgirepository1.0-dev | meson | ninja-build | appstream-util |
Distro | Python 3.6+ | pip | gobject-introspection | libappindicator | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | libdazzle |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arch Linux | python | python-pip | gobject-introspection | libappindicator3 | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | libdazzle |
Fedora | python3 | python3-pip | gobject-introspection-devel | libappindicator-gtk3 | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | libdazzle |
OpenSUSE | python3 | python3-pip | gobject-introspection | libappindicator3-1 | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | typelib-1_0-libdazzle-1_0 |
Ubuntu | python3 | python3-pip | libgirepository1.0-dev | gir1.2-appindicator3-0.1 | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | libdazzle |
plus all the Python dependencies listed in requirements.txt
If you have not installed GWE yet:
git clone --recurse-submodules -j4 https://gitlab.com/leinardi/gwe.git
cd gwe
git checkout release
sudo -H pip3 install -r requirements.txt
meson . build --prefix /usr
ninja -v -C build
sudo ninja -v -C build install
If you installed GWE from source code previously and you want to update it:
cd gwe
git fetch
git checkout release
git reset --hard origin/release
git submodule init
git submodule update
sudo -H pip3 install -r requirements.txt
meson . build --prefix /usr
ninja -v -C build
sudo ninja -v -C build install
Once installed, to start it you can simply execute on a terminal:
gwe
If you want to use GWE with Bumblebee you need to start it with optirun
and set the --ctrl-display
parameter to :8
:
optirun gwe --ctrl-display ":8"
- Show general GPU info
- Show power info
- Show clocks info
- Show GPU temp in both app and app indicator
- Show fan info
- Allow to hide main app window
- Add command line option to start the app hidden
- Add Refresh timeout to settings
- Add command line option to add desktop entry
- About dialog
- Distributing with PyPI
- Show chart of selected fan profile
- Allow to select and apply a fan profile
- Add/Delete/Edit multi speed fan profiles (fan curve)
- Add option to restore last applied fan profile on app startup
- Find better icons for app indicator
- Try to lower resource consumption (mostly caused by
nvidia-settings
invocations) - Show historical data of most important values in a separate dialog (requires GTK 3.24/GNOME 3.30)
- Add overclock profiles
- Add option to restore last applied overclock profile on app startup
- Disable unsupported preferences
- Distributing with Flatpak
- Publishing on Flathub
- Distributing with Snap
- Check if NV-CONTROL is available and tell the user if is not
- Add support for multi-GPU
- Allow to select profiles from app indicator
- Add support for i18n (internationalization and localization)
Parameter | Description | Source | Flatpak |
---|---|---|---|
-v, --version | Show the app version | x | x |
--debug | Show debug messages | x | x |
--hide-window | Start with the main window hidden | x | x |
--ctrl-display DISPLAY | Specify the NV-CONTROL display | x | x |
--autostart-on | Enable automatic start of the app on login | x | |
--autostart-off | Disable automatic start of the app on login | x |
If you don't have Flatpak installed you can find step by step instructions here.
Make sure to have the Flathub remote added to the current user:
flatpak --user remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo
git clone --recurse-submodules -j4 https://gitlab.com/leinardi/gwe.git
It is possible to build the local source or the remote one (the same that Flathub uses)
./build.sh --flatpak-local --flatpak-install
./build.sh --flatpak-remote --flatpak-install
flatpak run com.leinardi.gwe --debug
Coolbits was a Windows registry hack for Nvidia graphics cards Windows drivers, that allows
tweaking features via the Nvidia driver control panel.
Something similar is available also on Linux and is the only way to enable Overclock and manual Fan control.
To know more about Coolbits and how to enable them click
here
(to enable both OC and Fan control you need to set it to 12
).
To fix this issue install a Gtk theme from Flathub. This way, Flatpak applications will automatically pick the installed Gtk theme and use that instead of Adwaita.
Use this command to get a list of all the available Gtk themes on Flathub:
flatpak --user remote-ls flathub | grep org.gtk.Gtk3theme
And then just install your preferred theme. For example, to install Yaru:
flatpak install flathub org.gtk.Gtk3theme.Yaru
This issue can be usually solved by closing GWE, executing flatpak update
and starting GWE again.
This is necessary to be sure to have the latest org.freedesktop.Platform.GL.nvidia.
If, after the update, all the fields are still empty, feel free to open a new issue on the project tracker.
Why the memory overclock offsets effectively applied does not match the one set in the Nvidia Settings app?
Because Memory Transfer Rate, what Nvidia Settings reports and changes, is different from the effective Memory Clock, what is actually being displayed by GWE. It is also what other Windows applications like MSI Afterburner show. The Memory Transfer Rate is simply double the Memory Clock.
Installation type | Location |
---|---|
Flatpak | $HOME/.var/app/com.leinardi.gwe/ |
Source code | $XDG_CONFIG_HOME (usually $HOME/.config/gwe ) |
The name comes from the slogan of the GeForce 8 series, that was "Green with envy". Nvidia is meant to be pronounced "invidia", which means envy in Latin (and Italian). And their logo is green so, GreenWithEnvy
- Snap (see #18)
- Getting current GTK theme text color (see #36)
- Making Bumblebee work with Flatpak (see #35)
If you want to help testing or developing it would be easier to get in touch using the discord server of the project: https://discord.gg/xBybdRt Just write a message on the general channel saying how you want to help (test, dev, etc) and quoting @leinardi. If you don't use discor but still want to help just open a new issue here.
Something simple that everyone can do is to star it on both GitLab and GitHub. Feedback is always welcome: if you found a bug or would like to suggest a feature, feel free to open an issue on the issue tracker.
Development builds were previously distributed using PyPI. This way of distributing the software is simple but requires the user to manually install all the non Python dependencies like cairo, glib, appindicator3, etc. The current implementation of the historical data uses a new library, Dazzle, that requires Gnome 3.30 which is available, using Python Object introspection, only starting from Ubuntu 18.10 making the latest Ubuntu LTS, 18.04, unsupported. A solution for all this problems is distributing the app via Flatpak, since with it all the dependencies will be bundled and provided automatically, making possible to use Gnome 3.30 features also on distributions using an older version of Gnome.
No new build will be published on PyPI.
If you have already installed GWE via pip
, please make sure to uninstall it completely before moving to a newer version:
pip3 uninstall gwe
rm -rf ~/.config/gwe
Thanks to:
- GabMus and TingPing for the huge help with Flatpak
- @999eagle for maintaining the AUR package
- @tim74 for maintaining the COPR package
- Lighty for moderating the Discord server
- fbcotter for the py3nvml library
- all the devs of the python-xlib library
- tiheum for the Faenza icons set, from which I took the current GWE launcher icon
- all the people that helped testing and reported bugs
- OMG! Ubuntu 🇬🇧
- GamingOnLinux 🇬🇧
- Phoronix 🇬🇧
- ComputerBase 🇩🇪
- lffl 🇮🇹
- osside blog 🇮🇹
- Diolinux 🇧🇷
- Blog do Edivaldo 🇧🇷
- Linux Adictos 🇪🇸
This file is part of gwe.
Copyright (c) 2019 Roberto Leinardi
gwe is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
gwe is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with gwe. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.