Author Topic: [MOVED] Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts  (Read 1645038 times)

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Offline gnifTopic starter

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #75 on: March 24, 2013, 10:18:06 pm »
I just discovered that this post is being covered on Tomshardware, haha: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Nvidia-GTX-690-Quadro-K5000,21656.html

Awesome! A little annoyed though that they did not link to this thread.
Edit: Hats off to TomsHardwareGuide for updating the article promptly with this information.

Would you please post your card's brand and full model # as obviously not all cards are based on the reference design?

It is the EVGA GeForce GTX 690 (04G-P4-2690-KR).

does anyone know what would a GTX660 TI mod into? or if its even modable?

Please read through the thread for the answer, unless someone donates one to the cause we will never know.
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 02:47:09 am by gnif »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #76 on: March 24, 2013, 11:57:32 pm »
does anyone know what would a GTX660 TI mod into? or if its even modable?

GTX660 Ti is based on GK104 so *possibly* a Quadro K5000 or Tesla K10 as both share the same chip as GTX.
 

Offline bdx

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #77 on: March 25, 2013, 12:37:00 am »
Gnif,
I'v been keeping up with this thread...I ran across this while researching how I might pass-through my k20 or 660 ti(s) to a virtual machine using esxi 5.1 and horizon view 5.2. I will donate a gtx 660 ti to the cause. How can I get this to you?

bdx
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 12:47:29 am by bdx »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #78 on: March 25, 2013, 12:56:48 am »
I ran across this while researching how I might pass-through my k20 or 660 ti(s) to a virtual machine using esxi 5.1 and horizon view 5.2.

I know it's off topic but I am also interested in passing hardware directly to the VMs. You probably know this already but if not, in order to do it you need to have a vt-d capable CPU and motherboard as well as BIOS support enabled.

Here's a thread of interest http://forums.mydigitallife.info/threads/33730-VT-d-enabled-motherboards-and-CPUs-for-Paravirtualization
 

Offline bdx

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #79 on: March 25, 2013, 01:34:49 am »
Amigo-
Thanks for the heads up....
I have been attempting this type of configuration for a year+ now. I've had success passing through ATI cards. Concerning Nvidia, I have had success (though it is a true pain) by following the methods described here http://communities.vmware.com/message/2036345.
I am currently trying to configure Horizon View 5.2 for vDGA using Nvidia cards.
If you wish to discuss this further please contact me privately per topic of this thread.
Thanks
bdx
 

Offline gnifTopic starter

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #80 on: March 25, 2013, 02:18:42 am »
Gnif,
I'v been keeping up with this thread...I ran across this while researching how I might pass-through my k20 or 660 ti(s) to a virtual machine using esxi 5.1 and horizon view 5.2. I will donate a gtx 660 ti to the cause. How can I get this to you?

bdx

Hi bdx, thanks for the vote of support, I will PM you details:

I ran across this while researching how I might pass-through my k20 or 660 ti(s) to a virtual machine using esxi 5.1 and horizon view 5.2.

I know it's off topic but I am also interested in passing hardware directly to the VMs. You probably know this already but if not, in order to do it you need to have a vt-d capable CPU and motherboard as well as BIOS support enabled.

Here's a thread of interest http://forums.mydigitallife.info/threads/33730-VT-d-enabled-motherboards-and-CPUs-for-Paravirtualization

I have done this with Xen, but like amigo, never with NVidia, only ATI. Have a look here: http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Xen_PCI_Passthrough. Otherwise please create a new thread as this is off topic here (may be offtopic to this entire forum as this forum is Electronics related).
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 02:20:15 am by gnif »
 

Offline verybigbadboy

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #81 on: March 25, 2013, 08:10:07 am »
Successfully modifed:
Zotac GT640 2G to NVIDIA GRID K1
Palit GTX 650 2G to NVIDIA GRID K1
SPARKLE GeForce GTS 450  1GB to Quadro 2000

EVGA GTX670 by blanka
EVGA GTX670 good pictures by shlomo.m




Hello,

I managed to find the resistors responsible for PCI Id in the graphics card gtx 680 2gb  GV-N680OC-2GD, Device Id: 10DE 1180

Below you can find a list of IDs that I run successfully:
gtx 670, Device Id: 10DE 1189 with 1536 cores.
tesla k10, Device Id: 10DE 118F
quadro k5000, Device Id: 10DE 11BA
vgx grid k2, Device Id: 10DE 11BF
not tested:
gtx770 Device Id 0x1184
gtx660 ti Device Id 0x1183

Also, I succeeded in running the driver on every modification.
My goal was to get the opportunity to do gpu passthough and I achieved it. Only vgx grid k2 and tesla k10 supports this technology. Quadro k5000 works too, but only till I reboot the virtual machine for the 1st time.
I ran gpu passthough using kvm by doing some mouse clicking in the virt-manager. Config of my system is i5-3570, GA-Z77MX-D3H + gpu.
Moreover, I tested the stability on a virtual machine with windows 7 using furmark. Everything works perfectly, the virtual machine can be rebooted as many times as you want without rebooting the host.

Here are a couple of tests:
Tesla on the virtual machine:  file: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/hacking-nvidia-cards-into-their-professional-counterparts/?action=dlattach;attach=42263
Tesla on the host: file: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/hacking-nvidia-cards-into-their-professional-counterparts/?action=dlattach;attach=42265

NVIDIA Quadro K5000 http://www.ozone3d.net/benchmarks/furmark_score_180.php?id=fe897bb5eef07ca3e8265832340895df
NVIDIA GRID K2 http://www.ozone3d.net/benchmarks/furmark_score_180.php?id=0c875302f22cf53d2d58faad5eb65a1e

and here comes the most exciting  part: the resistors location


let's consider the example of the modification

Initially device id is 1180
third symbol = 8
4th symbol = 0

1 resistor is responsible for the third symbol. Initially it's 25k on gtx680. tried to replace it with 10k - got A deleting resistor B. Works, but in a weird way :).
2 resistor is responsible for the 4th, symbol 8-f. Tested values: 10k = 9, 15k = A.
3 resistor is responsible for the 4th, symbol 0-7. It is originally 5k on gtx680.
If you use second resistor, third one has to be removed, and vice versa.

Summary
GPU NameResistor 0 / 3th byte Resistor 1 / 3th byte Resistor 2 / 8-f 4th byteResistor 3 / 0-7 4th byte
GTX 660 tinone25knone20k
GTX 670none25k10knone
GTX 680none25knone5k
GTX 770none25knone25k
tesla k10none25k40knone
quadro k500040knone15knone
grid k240knone40knone

upd:
removing resistor 1 may cause random ID changes after reboot :) I will update post after i solve it.
upd April 07, 2013, 07:15:34 AM:
status: testing, works fine, tested about 10 reboots and poweroffs.
upd April 09, 2013, 05:53:00 PM:
works fine, tested many reboots, looks like 40k resistor fixed issue.
April 13, 2013, 07:12:24 AM:
works fine. ;)

upd1 from gamezr2ez
Quote
I was able to successfully modify my card to a Grid K2.

Something that was interesting was I kept getting kernel panics with the 40k resistors. After some experimenting I found a stable solution for this card.

Resistor 0: None
Resistor 1: None
Resistor 2: 100k
Resistor 3: None

My card is an Asus GTX680. I know they build their own PCB layout and my PCB was slightly different than yours (different spacing, same location). I am guessing that may have something to do with it, but I am still a bit confused as to how the resistors directly effect the ID anyway. This was my first time working with SMD components so I may have messed something up, who knows? It works, that is what matters.

Thoughts:
I wonder what happens if we take gtx 670 and modify the id to 680 and the upload 680 BIOS. will it unlock cores?
You may need to compare some other resistances too.
upd: It is imposible due to different names of gk104. 
gtx 680 gk104-400
gtx 670 gk104-325
gtx 660ti gk104-300
I think processor is laser-cutted.
intresting what if someone buy gk104-400 from alibaba(105$) and replace gk104-300 for example ;)

« Last Edit: August 07, 2014, 11:53:05 am by verybigbadboy »
6'7''
 
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Offline gnifTopic starter

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #82 on: March 25, 2013, 08:25:27 am »
Hello,

I managed to find the resistors responsible for PCI Id in the graphics card gtx 680 2gb, Device Id: 10DE 1180

Great work! That is one less card to try to identify :).

I wonder what happens if we take gtx 670 and modify the id to 680 and the upload 680 BIOS. will it unlock cores?

A user is kindly donating one to the cause to see what we can do with it.
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 08:45:39 am by gnif »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #83 on: March 25, 2013, 01:46:11 pm »
verybigbadboy,

Great job. Please tell us the brand and exact model of the card?

I know I sound like I'm repeating myself, but there's a reason for this. Some manufacturers use reference NV designs in their boards, while others change them.

When they use reference design, we can then pinpoint exactly the location of resistors to change across multiple boards because they are all based on the same reference. :)
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #84 on: March 25, 2013, 02:08:47 pm »
Further to my post, let me show you what I mean:



I matched your photo composite. Can you guess what board this comes from? :)

Inno3D GTX 670.
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #85 on: March 25, 2013, 02:39:11 pm »
Ok well why not take it all the way...



I took the Inno3D board photos and flipped the back side vertically, then matched it to the front side.

I marked the REFERENCE for alignment and then PADS where you can see the vias coming through and connecting to the other side.

This should be self explanatory, if not, basically it shows how those resistors are related to each other, front to back. I guess when they laid the board out for whatever reason they did not put them all on the same side.

I do not have any cards yet to test, but I would postulate that you can make any GK104 series (Kepler) into Quadro or Tesla or VGX. Of course the issue of the GK104 chip's fuses being burnt on GTX cards would prevent exact specification match to Quadro/Tesla/VGX. But something is better than nothing. :)
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 02:42:49 pm by amigo »
 

Offline ErikTande

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #86 on: March 25, 2013, 07:15:57 pm »
I have a GTX 660 Ti that I would be willing to submit as a guinea pig.     If someone with the abilty and desire to attempt this with a GTX 660 Ti card, send me a PM.   I'll ship the card as long as you ship it back :-+
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 07:38:44 pm by ErikTande »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #87 on: March 25, 2013, 07:38:57 pm »
I have a GTX 660 Ti that I would be willing to submit as a guinea pig.   Is this something that gnif or someone else could walk me through over skype?

*edit* nevermind, it looks a little too involved for me to handle.  I would need to send the card to someone else.

If someone with the abilty to attempt this wants a card, send me a PM.   I'll ship a 660 Ti as long as you ship it back  :-+

You edited your message while I was preparing an image for you...

If you have a steady hand and decent tools to move the resistors, here's where I think the resistors are on the 660 Ti (of course I could be terribly wrong :) )

Left: Quadro K5000, right: GTX 660 Ti
 

Offline emoose

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #88 on: March 25, 2013, 07:51:22 pm »
I have a GTX 660 Ti that I would be willing to submit as a guinea pig.   Is this something that gnif or someone else could walk me through over skype?

*edit* nevermind, it looks a little too involved for me to handle.  I would need to send the card to someone else.

If someone with the abilty to attempt this wants a card, send me a PM.   I'll ship a 660 Ti as long as you ship it back  :-+

You edited your message while I was preparing an image for you...

If you have a steady hand and decent tools to move the resistors, here's where I think the resistors are on the 660 Ti (of course I could be terribly wrong :) )

Left: Quadro K5000, right: GTX 660 Ti

Same place that I marked earlier... good to know I wasn't off track  :-+
Now I'm just hoping that the 670 gnif is getting uses the same board  8)

Maybe we should setup a board number -> resistor location table somewhere?
Seems a lot of different cards use the same board, would make it easier for people to see if their card is supported yet.
Board number is pretty easy to find too, most times it's written on the card (like here it's written as <BOARDNUMBER>.rom)
Another way to get it is looking with GPU-Z, the BIOS version field usually has it (it does for my card at least)

does anyone know what would a GTX660 TI mod into? or if its even modable?
Well it looks like some 660 Ti's share the same board as the 670, so it might be possible to convert them over and get full use of the 256-bit memory interface... But for all we know these 660-on-670 cards might be some sort of binned hardware with 660 firmware put on to "cripple" them into not using the damaged parts :/ I'm thinking it should work though because the RAM chips themselves are 256-bit.
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 07:59:03 pm by emoose »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #89 on: March 25, 2013, 08:14:32 pm »
660 Ti will turn into K5000, because the board designs are exactly the same, except that the K5000 has the full feature chip (1536/128/32 Shaders/TMUs/ROPs) instead of a possibly crippled/damaged version (1344/1112/24 Shaders/TMUs/ROPs).

Perhaps the resistors on the back of the board underneath the GPU set the configuration, but we need a really good photo close-ups of the boards to see the differences. It's a long shot but we got nothing to lose. :)

My guesstimate is that the Device ID resistors are usually located on the back side in-between U504 and U505 for smaller boards (GTX 660, K5000); on the larger boards (GTX 670, 680) they are also around there as well as around U1 and Y1 on the front side.
« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 08:16:05 pm by amigo »
 

Offline ErikTande

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #90 on: March 25, 2013, 08:27:03 pm »

Perhaps the resistors on the back of the board underneath the GPU set the configuration, but we need a really good photo close-ups of the boards to see the differences. It's a long shot but we got nothing to lose. :)

I'll take pics as soon as I get home from work.  It will be in about 4 hours from now.
 

Offline emoose

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #91 on: March 25, 2013, 08:27:12 pm »
660 Ti will turn into K5000, because the board designs are exactly the same, except that the K5000 has the full feature chip (1536/128/32 Shaders/TMUs/ROPs) instead of a possibly crippled/damaged version (1344/1112/24 Shaders/TMUs/ROPs).
Hmm, do we know where that limitation exists though? It seems that my 660 Ti's board is the same number as a 670s, which should mean that it uses the same kind of chip. Here's some info I was editing into my other post before I saw yours:

  • The 660-on-670 board number is 20040005, which is the same as the 670.
  • Most 660 Ti's use 20040001 boards which I'm not sure would be convertible.
  • My 20040005 660Ti's BIOS seems to have code to emulate/disguise/downgrade itself to a 20040001 board internally, possibly to make drivers work properly (although gpu-z still picks up the proper number)

I'm hoping the limit is in the BIOS, so I can just reflash and swap resistors and hey presto a ghetto 670 %-B
Probably not likely but it's worth a shot...
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #92 on: March 25, 2013, 08:39:40 pm »
See that's the thing, unless the board numbers match, most manufacturers design their own GTX 670 boards because they are higher-end items and consumers demand better power supply design and better components.

With regards to getting the missing computing units, that's neither here nor there. The chips (chip die, silicon) used are all the same (cheaper to manufacture) but they could have factory burnt fuses (inside GPUs) that disable computing units; on-board limitations (like resistors); bios restrictions (least likely imho  because it would be a huge "fail", but I could be wrong) or simply be damaged GPUs that did not pass QA for higher boards.
 

Offline emoose

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #93 on: March 25, 2013, 09:06:23 pm »
See that's the thing, unless the board numbers match, most manufacturers design their own GTX 670 boards because they are higher-end items and consumers demand better power supply design and better components.

With regards to getting the missing computing units, that's neither here nor there. The chips (chip die, silicon) used are all the same (cheaper to manufacture) but they could have factory burnt fuses (inside GPUs) that disable computing units; on-board limitations (like resistors); bios restrictions (least likely imho  because it would be a huge "fail", but I could be wrong) or simply be damaged GPUs that did not pass QA for higher boards.

I'd figured as much, really though I'm not that interested in making the card more powerful, just hoping to get the improved memory bandwidth... The card performs pretty well until it comes to memory-intensive stuff, then it starts to make me wonder why I didn't pay the extra £50 for the 670 :(

I'd like to think that they'd handle the memory controller stuff in the BIOS, can't really see them making it dependent on e-fuses when it's all down to the number of address lanes on the board, why make it take the time to check some fuses when you know exactly how many lanes the hardware supports (or is crippled to)? That'd just be wasting space in the BIOS...

At least that's how I'd think it out, but then again I'm not a for-profit company... Only way to find out is experimenting  O0 (or if any insiders from NVIDIA feel like helping out, go ahead :P)

« Last Edit: March 25, 2013, 09:10:26 pm by emoose »
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #94 on: March 25, 2013, 09:17:40 pm »
I think the most interesting bits are making these cards support hardware virtualization which brings the whole field down to the Earth, for all hobbyists who do not have $10k+ to spend on Nvidia VGX solutions. :)

And why should it be any other way: true innovation and progress in the last 100 years had always come from individual people (a lone nut in a garage) and not from some huge research facility attached to some corporation. The latter generally appropriate (steal? :) ) innovation, make improvements, then patent it and basically lock it away with high prices from the people it was originally intended for.
 

Offline winjet1

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #95 on: March 25, 2013, 09:48:00 pm »
I would be extremely interested to learn how verybigbadboy was able to convert his 680 into a VGX/GRID K1 (i.e. what to solder, what resistors to use and where to get them, etc).  That would open up a lot of things to the home-virualization crowd.

I'd even give a little funding for some "idiots guide to turning your 680 into a VGX"

Just sayin.........
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #96 on: March 25, 2013, 10:04:47 pm »
My 20040005 660Ti's BIOS seems to have code to emulate/disguise/downgrade itself to a 20040001 board internally, possibly to make drivers work properly (although gpu-z still picks up the proper number)

By the way, how do you know that your BIOS is downgrading your card, perhaps you have some pointers to look at?
 

Offline verybigbadboy

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #97 on: March 25, 2013, 10:07:03 pm »
I would be extremely interested to learn how verybigbadboy was able to convert his 680 into a VGX/GRID K1

Just remove resistor 1 and 3 showed on picture in my first post and you will get grid k2

Also now I am trying to modify gts450 to quadro 2000. But I have a problem with getting 4th symbol. I think it is possible to modify almost all nvidia cards which have counterparts. Gts450 have similar way to setup device id.

I think gt200 series can be modified too, I looked at died gt240 and I think I know where are right resistors.
6'7''
 

Offline amigo

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #98 on: March 25, 2013, 10:10:19 pm »
I would be extremely interested to learn how verybigbadboy was able to convert his 680 into a VGX/GRID K1 (i.e. what to solder, what resistors to use and where to get them, etc).  That would open up a lot of things to the home-virualization crowd.

I'd even give a little funding for some "idiots guide to turning your 680 into a VGX"

Just sayin.........

Both verybigbadboy and me have posted enough information for anyone to mod a card based on the reference designs.

His images referring to locations and values as well as the images I posted of GTX 670 apply to GTX 680 as well, unless you have a different board. But then again you did not specify what brand/model you have?

Surely if you come here you must know where to get SMT components? :)
 

Offline natiss88

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Re: Hacking NVidia Cards into their Professional Counterparts
« Reply #99 on: March 25, 2013, 10:21:50 pm »
yeah...! just registered, only to follow this thread..

first of all, congratulations to gnif and others who are working on this.
as a cad user "with small budget", this thread is very interesting.

second, modding a 680 to a k5000 will be great. i've read verybigbadboy's post, but it's a little bit confusing. i personally don't need k5000 performances, i could go with a k2000 (650) or a k4000 (650 ti).

p.s.:
i can somewhat help with a quadro 600, (it's a fermi, i know, but it can be useful for someone) if someone has a gt430 i can compare the pcbs (i have a pny 430, but it's not reference pcb).

 


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