I'm aware there's already been a question and answer regarding Nvidia drivers, but my case is a little different. My wireless adapter's driver is proprietary, and for a minimal install, I need a command to install it. A general command for any other restricted driver that I may come across in the future would also be extremely helpful.
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Do the instruction in the other answer work for you? (`--list` in particular) – Stefano Palazzo Feb 19 '11 at 01:28
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No, I didn't try it since I've only one system. Is jockey-text pre-installed in Ubuntu installs? – Oxwivi Feb 19 '11 at 05:56
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You can run jockey-text, which is the command line equivalent of the "Additional Drivers" GUI tool.
jockey-text -h will show you the options available.
Jorge Castro
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Do I need to install anything to use it? And is it necessary to have jockey* installed for restricted drivers? – Oxwivi Feb 19 '11 at 19:49
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It's installed by default, and unless you plan to manually hunt down individual drivers then you need it installed to fetch the right ones. – Jorge Castro Feb 19 '11 at 23:04
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Thou art mistaken, for executing the above code asketh me to installeth `jockey-common`. – Oxwivi Feb 21 '11 at 18:01
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what code? Did it ask you to install jockey-common after you ran jockey-text for the first time? – Jorge Castro Feb 21 '11 at 18:05
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Anyway, it'd be great if I could simply locate and download only the necessary driver package for my model since `jockey` seems to be an one-time use application. – Oxwivi Feb 21 '11 at 18:10
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It's exaclty as you say, after I ran the command (sorry not code) it asked to me install `jockey-common`. By the way, it's actually the second time, the first time was before I installed any GUI. – Oxwivi Feb 21 '11 at 18:11
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Can't answer that right now. Like I commented on the question, I've got only one active system, so I can't try it out outright. What I've updated you on are just the results on a VM I'm running. – Oxwivi Feb 21 '11 at 18:29
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jockey-text -l
shows what drivers are available
jockey-text -e <type:name>
enables a driver. Only last -e seems to be used. eg.
jockey-text -e kmod:wl
It goes quiet for a long time during which it fetches and installs the driver. You can use
jockey-text -l
again to check that your driver is now enabled.
Faye Salwin
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