I'm getting an error on Debian Wheezy 32 bit. I have a 560TI. Driver is 304.64. I download the file you have linked here somewhere, the cudaminer_414.gz. I can run it but with the configuration of cudaminer -o URL -O credentials it does nothing but start and wait while with
mads@Adria:~/cudaminer$ ./cudaminer_414 -m 1,1 -l auto,auto -o http://netcodepool.org:8337 -O nakedman.1:xxx
*** CudaMiner for nVidia GPUs by Christian Buchner ***
This is version 2013-04-14 (alpha)
based on pooler-cpuminer 2.2.3 (c) 2010 Jeff Garzik, 2012 pooler
Cuda additions Copyright 2013 Christian Buchner
My donation address: LKS1WDKGED647msBQfLBHV3Ls8sveGncnm
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] 2 miner threads started, using 'scrypt' algorithm.
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] Long-polling activated for http://netcodepool.org:8337/LP
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #0: with compute capability -1244551188.-1244550632
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #0: interactive: 0, tex-cache: 0, single-alloc: 1
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #1: with compute capability -1252943892.-1252943336
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #1: interactive: 0, tex-cache: 0, single-alloc: 1
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #0: Performing auto-tuning (Patience...)
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #0: 0.00 khash/s with configuration 0x0
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #0: using launch configuration 0x0
[2013-04-18 16:59:31] GPU #1: Performing auto-tuning (Patience...)
Floating point exception
I am not sure where the floating point exception comes from. I have only downloaded and installed 32bit stuff. Unless the cudaminer you linked under the guise of being 32 bit is actually 64bit. You know why I'm getting this error?
I just noticed there was a new release here, the cudaminer 417. I am getting an error trying to run this:
mads@Adria:~/cudaminer$ ./cudaminer_417 -m 1,1 -l auto,auto -o http://netcodepool.org:8337 -O nakedman.1:xxx
./cudaminer_417: error while loading shared libraries: libcrypto.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
I am not sure where I can get the libcrypto.so.6 on Debian. I have tried install openssl and libssl, but it doesn't seem to do the trick.