CUDA runtime version vs CUDA driver version - what's the difference?

einpoklum picture einpoklum · Nov 14, 2016 · Viewed 24.8k times · Source

The CUDA Runtime API exposes the functions

  • cudaRuntimeGetVersion() and
  • cudaDriverGetVersion()

(see detailed description here). I was sort of expecting the first one to give me "8.0" (for CUDA 8.0) and the second one to give me the same string as what I'd get from examining nVIDIA's GPU driver kernel module, e.g.

modinfo nvidia | grep "^version:" | sed 's/^version: *//;'

which on my system is 367.57.

Now, the first call gives me 8000 - fine, just a weird way to say 8.0 I guess; but the second API call also gives me 8000. So what do both of these mean?

The Runtime API documentation I linked to doesn't seem to explain this.

Answer

Robert Crovella picture Robert Crovella · Nov 14, 2016

The CUDA runtime version indicates CUDA compatibility (i.e. version) with respect to the installed cudart (CUDA runtime) library.

The CUDA driver version (as reported here) reports the same information with respect to the driver.

This relates to the driver compatibility model in CUDA. As I am sure you know, a particular CUDA toolkit version (i.e. CUDA runtime library version, nvcc compiler version, etc.) requires a particular minimum driver level for proper use of the codes compiled with that toolkit.

The CUDA driver version (as reported here) effectively reports what CUDA version(s) can be supported by the particular installed driver.

As you've already discovered, it does not report the actual numbered driver version.