When do you really need to use DDU?
Posted: Sat Jun 10, 2023 3:08 am
DDU is often used as the solution to try when sorting out possible driver issues. At the same time, I've seen it suggested that it should be used whenever you make a hardware change, regardless of which path you go to. A common reason I heard is that the OS can get confused as to which driver to use. Although I haven't seen it, I have a feeling that people also think that because when you get a driver package from AMD or NVIDIA, they make you choose a specific model of graphics cards, and thus what you get only works with what you selected.
So I wanted to tackle a scenario since I was able to do this recently: Do you need to use DDU when upgrading from one NVIDIA card to another? The tl;dr is no, you don't.
Spoiler: Background: how does Windows handle drivers?
Spoiler: Test Setup
Spoiler: Results
Spoiler: So when should DDU be used?
However, if you want to continue suggesting that someone DDU the drivers anyway, I'm not going to stop you. This is just a post sharing what I've researched, what I've tested, and what I've concluded.
So I wanted to tackle a scenario since I was able to do this recently: Do you need to use DDU when upgrading from one NVIDIA card to another? The tl;dr is no, you don't.
Spoiler: Background: how does Windows handle drivers?
Spoiler: Test Setup
Spoiler: Results
Spoiler: So when should DDU be used?
However, if you want to continue suggesting that someone DDU the drivers anyway, I'm not going to stop you. This is just a post sharing what I've researched, what I've tested, and what I've concluded.