The Benchmark that is the basis for this image was developed for system and application administrators, security specialists, auditors, help desk professionals, and platform deployment personnel who plan to develop, deploy, assess, or secure solutions that incorporate Ubuntu Linux 20.04 LTS. To learn more or access the corresponding CIS Benchmark, please visit the Center for Internet Security website or visit our community platform, CIS WorkBench. The Level 1 Profile settings within the CIS Benchmark have been applied with the intent to provide a clear security benefit without inhibiting the utility of the technology beyond acceptable means.
This image has been hardened by CIS and is configured with the majority of the recommendations included in the free PDF version of the corresponding CIS Benchmark. Launching an image hardened according to the trusted security configuration baselines prescribed by a CIS Benchmark will reduce cost, time, and risk to an organization. Cloud environments and operating systems are not secure by default. CIS Benchmarks also provide a foundation to comply with numerous cybersecurity frameworks. CIS Benchmarks are vendor agnostic, consensus-based security configuration guides both developed and accepted by government, business, industry, and academia. I lifted the aforementioned from Changjiang's blog, which primes your build for Deep Learning if you're so inclined.This image of Ubuntu Linux 20.04 LTS is preconfigured by CIS to the recommendations in the associated CIS Benchmark. Many lists are included including filesystem types, services, clients, and network protocols. Reboot then proceed with the following: $ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa This document provides prescriptive guidance for establishing a secure configuration posture for Ubuntu Linux 16.04 LTS systems running on x86 and 圆4 platforms. there are certain steps you should take to ensure the most secure setup as possible. We are focusing on the initial configuration security measures for a Linux operating system. Open up a terminal prompt and we can begin. $ sudo dpkg -i libcudnn6_6.0.21-1+cuda8.0_b the security benchmark is CIS Ubuntu Linux 16.
I was successful updating Asus NVIDIA 1080 8 GB GPU drivers for Ubuntu 16.04 with the CUDA Toolkit: $ wget
Reboot the system and check the driver version with nvidia-smi command
For version 390, the install command will be as simple as: $ sudo apt-cache search nvidia | grep -E "nvidia-"įrom the list, install the version recommended by NVIDIA (may not be the latest). Search the available drivers from the apt cache
Keep it as a reference.Īfter adding the private NVIDIA ppa repository, update the apt index. In the search result page, the recommended driver version will be displayed. Provide the OS information, graphics card model, and CUDA toolkit version and perform Search. I wrote the annotated installation guide in this article. The next question is, which version? There is a systematic approach to installing the most appropriate driver, which may or not may be the latest version.
Recently I found it more convenient to use the proprietary drivers.
During testing, I found that I had to use the Windows System Boot Manager, and manually disable secure boot. The walk-through from Ubuntu may be incomplete. Make sure that secure boot is disabled in Windows Boot Manager. Removing nVidia Drivers - Purge - see this answer.Black screen on startup - Add nomodeset to grub - see this answer.$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa.CIS provides one of the first non-Oracle listings available in those regions. The Oracle Cloud Marketplace listings are also available in US Gov and US DoD regions. CIS Ubuntu Linux 20.04 LTS Benchmark-Level 1. CIS Ubuntu Linux 18.04 LTS Benchmark-Level 1. Download the driver version 375.20 from here CIS Ubuntu Linux 16.04 LTS Benchmark-Level 1.But the manual installation isn't as difficult as you might think. I cant find any reference to support in jockey for nVidia 375 yet.