Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

stupots

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Mar 20, 2019
23
26
Kent, UK
Hi, I wanted bootable NVMe and Nvidia support, and I knew the 387.10.10.10.40.122 drivers worked OK on 10.13.6 so didn't think anything of applying the prerequisite Mojave firmware 140.0.0.0... then when I tried to install the drivers (using the nvidia-update script on github) it said that there wasn't a supported driver for my 10.13.6 macOS. Now i've RTFM it looks like I should have stuck on High Sierra boot rom 139 and done without NVMe support if I wanted to use my 980ti? Is there any way to downgrade back to 139 on a Mid 2010 cMP?

Thanks

Stu
 
Hi, I wanted bootable NVMe and Nvidia support, and I knew the 387.10.10.10.40.122 drivers worked OK on 10.13.6 so didn't think anything of applying the prerequisite Mojave firmware 140.0.0.0... then when I tried to install the drivers (using the nvidia-update script on github) it said that there wasn't a supported driver for my 10.13.6 macOS. Now i've RTFM it looks like I should have stuck on High Sierra boot rom 139 and done without NVMe support if I wanted to use my 980ti? Is there any way to downgrade back to 139 on a Mid 2010 cMP?

Thanks

Stu
It's not a BootROM problem, BootROM has nothing to do with NVIDIA drivers. The problem is that NVIDIA WEB drivers are tied to specific macOS versions. To work with this week new release of Security Updates, NVIDIA drivers need to be updated.

You can use the pulled 108 version, someone here is hosting it, people reports that this NVIDIA WEB driver version works with multiple macOS 10.13.6 releases.
 
Hi, I wanted bootable NVMe and Nvidia support, and I knew the 387.10.10.10.40.122 drivers worked OK on 10.13.6 so didn't think anything of applying the prerequisite Mojave firmware 140.0.0.0... then when I tried to install the drivers (using the nvidia-update script on github) it said that there wasn't a supported driver for my 10.13.6 macOS. Now i've RTFM it looks like I should have stuck on High Sierra boot rom 139 and done without NVMe support if I wanted to use my 980ti? Is there any way to downgrade back to 139 on a Mid 2010 cMP?

Thanks

Stu
http://www.macvidcards.com/drivers.html
 
Hi, I wanted bootable NVMe and Nvidia support, and I knew the 387.10.10.10.40.122 drivers worked OK on 10.13.6 so didn't think anything of applying the prerequisite Mojave firmware 140.0.0.0... then when I tried to install the drivers (using the nvidia-update script on github) it said that there wasn't a supported driver for my 10.13.6 macOS. Now i've RTFM it looks like I should have stuck on High Sierra boot rom 139 and done without NVMe support if I wanted to use my 980ti? Is there any way to downgrade back to 139 on a Mid 2010 cMP?

Thanks

Stu

You can force install any version of the Nvidia driver using a script in terminal.

You'll need to boot into recovery mode first to disable SIP.

Once done boot back up and run this script in terminal

Code:
bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Benjamin-Dobell/nvidia-update/master/nvidia-update.sh) 387.10.10.10.40.122

replacing the driver version at the end of the code with whatever version you want to install.

Im currently running OSX 10.3.6 with Nvidia driver 378.10.10.10.25.106 as this was the last driver that worked with dual cards. If you're only running a single Nvidia card then you can install the latest drivers with no problem.

Hope this helps.
 
You can force install any version of the Nvidia driver using a script in terminal.

You'll need to boot into recovery mode first to disable SIP.

Once done boot back up and run this script in terminal

Code:
bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Benjamin-Dobell/nvidia-update/master/nvidia-update.sh) 387.10.10.10.40.122

replacing the driver version at the end of the code with whatever version you want to install.

Im currently running OSX 10.3.6 with Nvidia driver 378.10.10.10.25.106 as this was the last driver that worked with dual cards. If you're only running a single Nvidia card then you can install the latest drivers with no problem.

Hope this helps.

For single card system, no need to put any driver version at the back, the script will automatically install the latest good driver in the white list.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Alex Sanders74
Thanks all! I am constantly amazed at @tsialex's knowledge... A new driver came out today (.123) and my card now works perfectly with it. I'm currently re-installing High Sierra on a Samsung 970 Evo, so am very happy.

These forums are great.

Cheers

Stu
 
  • Like
Reactions: tsialex
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.