lspci will read the vendor and device id via PCI and use that to determine what the device is. You might want to make the output a bit more digestable / useful via lspci -s 03:00.0 -k -nn, but I’d assume the ids that match an 2070 will show up.
Could you please take the card out and provide us with a few pictures from different angles, maybe getting a good look at the actual chips?
I’d like to rule that out before chasing rabbits here.
Also, you could always run nvidia-settings, which will show information about an NVIDIA card using a different access method.
I’d still like to see the pictures of the card though ;)
lspci will read the vendor and device id via PCI and use that to determine what the device is. You might want to make the output a bit more digestable / useful via
lspci -s 03:00.0 -k -nn
, but I’d assume the ids that match an 2070 will show up.Could you please take the card out and provide us with a few pictures from different angles, maybe getting a good look at the actual chips?
I’d like to rule that out before chasing rabbits here.
Also, you could always run
nvidia-settings
, which will show information about an NVIDIA card using a different access method.I’d still like to see the pictures of the card though ;)