# ROG-Core rog-core is a utility for Linux to control many aspects (eventually) of the ASUS ROG laptops like the Zephyrus GX502GW. One of the benefits of this app (for me at least) is that you *don't* require a kernel with correct support for the laptop, or custom patched modules. The app reads and writes direct to the device interrupts, and can be customised (in source) quite extensively to do what you want such as directly controlling your laptop backlight rather than emitting a key-press for the DE to handle. There is also the possibility of rebinding fn keys to be macros which emit a series of keyboard presses. The laptop I currently have is the GX502RW and so I'll be using that for the basis of this app. If I get wireshark captures from others with different ROG laptops then I should be able to add them. I'm now looking at the kernel source to see if I can add the inputs correctly so they show up as proper evdev events. ## Implemented - [X] Setting/modifying built-in LED modes - [X] Per-key LED setting (PARTIALLY COMPLETE) - [X] Fancy LED modes (See examples) - [X] Daemon mode - [X] Saving settings for reload - [ ] System control + [X] Sleep + [X] Airplane mode + [X] Screen off? Now mapped to a keycode but has no effect + [X] Screen brightness up/down + [ ] ROG key custom mapping (Can be done in source) + [X] Fan/Performance mode + [ ] Screen off?? + [X] Touchpad toggle (using a virtual keyboard to emit F21...) - [X] Capture and use hotkeys **Partially completed: aura keys work** + [X] Aura control by Aura keys + [X] Volume + media controls work - [X] Logging - required for journalctl ## Other Laptops **Supported:** - GX502 (product 0x1866) (Tested on GX502GW) **Partial/Inprogress:** - GM501 (multizone needs testing) - G14 (no Lid LED support, all other functions appear to work) Both of these laptops appear to have the same USB device ID as the GX502, but with different features enabled. **Please help test or provide info for:** - GL703(0x1869), GA502 (attempts to use same profile as GX502GW) - GL553(0x1854) GL753 (attempted support from researching 2nd-hand info, multizone may work) If the USB product ID is 0x1866 or 0x1869 then the per-key profile with hotkeys *should* work - 0x1866 is tested as this is what I have. ## Requirements for compiling - `rustc` + `cargo` + `make` - `libusb-1.0-0-dev` - `libdbus-1-dev` - `llvm` - `libclang-dev` ## Installing Run `make` then `sudo make install`. If you want to use the daemon mode on system boot you'll need to enable and start the systemd service with: ``` $ sudo systemctl start rog-core.service $ sudo systemctl enable rog-core.service ``` You may also need to activate the service for debian install. If running Pop!_OS, I suggest disabling `system76-power` gnome-shell extension, or at least limiting use of the power-management parts as `rog-core` lets you set the same things (one or the other will overwrite pstates). I will create a shell extension at some point similar to system76, but using the rog-core parts. It is safe to leave `system76-power.service` enabled and use for switching between graphics modes. ### Ubuntu PPA Alternatively, instead of building manually you can use the PPA. ``` sudo add-apt-repository ppa:lukedjones/rog-core sudo apt-get update sudo install rog-core ``` enable and start the service: ``` sudo systemctl start rog-core.service sudo systemctl enable rog-core.service ``` ### Gentoo ebuild Thanks to @aspann you can grab it here [sys-power/rog-core](https://lab.retarded.farm/zappel/zGentoo/-/tree/master/sys-power/rog-core) ## Updating Occasionally I might break things for you by tweaking or changing the config file layout. Usually this will mean you need to remove `/etc/rog-core.conf' and restart the daemon to create a new one. You *can* back up the old one and copy settings back over (then restart daemon again). ## Use **NOTE! Fan mode toggling requires a newer kernel**. I'm unsure when the patches required for it got merged - I've tested with the 5.6.6 kernel and above only. To see if the fan-mode changed cat either: - `cat /sys/devices/platform/asus-nb-wmi/throttle_thermal_policy` or - `cat /sys/devices/platform/asus-nb-wmi/fan_boost_mode` The numbers are 0 = Normal/Balanced, 1 = Boost, 2 = Silent. Running the program as a daemon manually will require root. Standard (non-daemon) mode expects to be communicating with the daemon mode over dbus. Commands are given by: ``` rog-core