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I am compiling Darknet on Ubuntu 16.04 with GPU support. Nvidial toolkit version 8.0 RC

And I get stuck with error:

nvcc --gpu-architecture=compute_52 --gpu-code=compute_52  -DOPENCV `pkg-config --cflags opencv`  -DGPU -I/usr/local/cuda/include/ --compiler-options "-Wall -Wfatal-errors  -Ofast -DOPENCV -DGPU" -c ./src/convolutional_kernels.cu -o obj/convolutional_kernels.o
/usr/local/cuda/include/surface_functions.h(134): error: expected a ";"

/usr/local/cuda/include/surface_functions.h(135): error: expected a ";"

/usr/local/cuda/include/surface_functions.h(136): error: expected a ";"

/usr/local/cuda/include/surface_functions.h at error lines has something like this:

template<> __device__ __cudart_builtin__ char surf1Dread(surface<void, cudaSurfaceType1D> surf, int x, enum cudaSurfaceBoundaryMode mode) asm("__surf1Dread_char") ;

Any advice ?

3
  • I have a CUDA 8RC setup without OpenCV. I downloaded the darknet master. This command: nvcc --gpu-architecture=compute_52 --gpu-code=compute_52 -DGPU -I/usr/local/cuda/include/ --compiler-options "-Wall -Wfatal-errors -Ofast -DGPU" -c ./src/convolutional_kernels.cu -o obj/convolutional_kernels.o runs without any error. Sep 5, 2016 at 21:14
  • what is the nvidia-cuda-toolkit version ? Sep 9, 2016 at 15:44
  • I used CUDA 8RC. nvcc --version reports: Cuda compilation tools, release 8.0, V8.0.26 Sep 9, 2016 at 15:47

3 Answers 3

15

So it happens when your environment uses different versions of nvcc binary and cuda includes files during compilation process.

Darknet is using /usr/local/cuda/include/ as its include path but relys on you PATH when executing nvcc binary. And it could belong to your another cuda installation in the system.

To avoid this force your shell to search for nvcc in the /usr/local/cuda/bin/nvcc.

This could be done either by hacking nvcc path in the Makefile:

replace NVCC=nvcc with NVCC=/usr/local/cuda/bin/nvcc

or by modyfying PATH variable for make command (simpler and session related)

PATH=/usr/local/cuda/bin:$PATH make
0
11

If you have several versions of CUDA installed and need them (like me), I recommend adding the following to your (BASH) RC:

# DARKNET
export PATH=/usr/local/cuda-8.0/bin${PATH:+:${PATH}}
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/cuda8.0/lib64${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}}

Source your RC ('. ~/.bashrc') and complilation works!

3
  • what does this have to do with the question?
    – talonmies
    Dec 23, 2016 at 6:17
  • 3
    This fixed the problem for me. The cuda driver 8.0 was conflicting with nvcc version 7.5 from nvidia-cuda-dev/nvidia-cuda-toolkit from the ubuntu repo. So explicitly setting these paths and re-running make built everything properly against 8.0. Note: I am not building darknet, came here from google, but similar problem.
    – emkman
    Jan 5, 2017 at 3:25
  • @talonmies this directly answers the compilation error question asked by the OP. In this particular case, extending the PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH resolves the issue. Jan 9, 2017 at 17:27
4

This error is because of nvcc version 7.5

Looks like Cuda toolkit 8.0 RC installation via deb files does not have nvcc version 8 I have reinstalled cuda via cuda_8.0.27_linux.run installed and it works for me now

1
  • The above answer generalizes to any version of CUDA. You need to let the environment know where your installation is. Example for CUDA 9.0: export PATH=/usr/local/cuda-9.0/bin${PATH:+:${PATH}}; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/cuda9.0/lib64${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}} Feb 25, 2018 at 6:31

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