L5P-Keyboard-RGB
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Cross platform software to control the RGB/lighting of the 4 zone keyboard included in the 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023 lineup of the Lenovo Legion laptops. Works on Windows and Linux.
Legion RGB Control
Index
- Download
-
Available effects
- Creating your own effects
-
Usage
- With GUI
- Via the command line
-
Compatibility
- "How about X model"
-
Building from source
- Prerequisites
-
Using
cargo-make
- Building manually
- Crashes, freezes, etc
Download
⚠️ Use at your own risk, the developer is not responsible for any damages that may arise as a result of using this program.
Builds will be periodically uploaded to the releases tab.
You may also download pre-compiled versions from here (requires github account) by clicking the latest entry with a ✅ and going under the "artifacts" section.
Available effects
All stock effects: Static, Breath, Smooth, LeftWave, RightWave.
Custom effects:
- Lightning: Adds a little spark.
- AmbientLight: Reacts to content on your screen.
- Smooth(Left/Right)Wave: An implementation of the classic wave effect.
- (Left/Right)Swipe: Transitions the selected colors from side to side, useful for custom waves.
- Disco: A portable dance floor!
- Christmas: Even keyboards can get festive.
- Fade: Turns off the keyboard lights after a period of inactivity.
- Temperature: Displays a gradient based on the current CPU temperature. (Linux only)
Creating your own effects
The best way to add a new effect is to directly edit the source code, as it allows the most flexibility. You can however also use the built-in feature to make basic effects.
At a glance
- You can make custom effects using a
json
file with the following format:
{
"effect_steps": [
{"rgb_array": [0, 0, 0, 0, 100, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], "step_type": "Set", "speed": 1, "brightness": 1, "steps": 100, "delay_between_steps": 100, "sleep": 100},
{"rgb_array": [0, 100, 0, 0, 0, 200, 0, 0, 200, 200, 0, 0], "step_type": "Transition", "speed": 1, "brightness": 1, "steps": 100, "delay_between_steps": 100, "sleep": 100}
],
"should_loop": true
}
File sections
-
effect_steps: Contains the different "steps" the effect will go through.
-
rgb_array: An array describing the colours to use in the
[r,g,b,r,g,b...]
format. -
step_type: The type of step to use. You may instantly swap the colours with
Set
or smoothly transition to them withTransition
. - speed: Currently unused.
-
brightness: The brightness of the step, can be
1
(low) or2
(high). - steps: To smoothly transition between colours, the keyboard LEDs are set at small intervals until they reach the desired color. This controls the number of them.
- delay_between_steps: How much time to wait between each interval (In ms).
-
sleep: The time to wait before going to the next
effect_step
(In ms).
-
rgb_array: An array describing the colours to use in the
- should_loop: Whether the effect should start again once it reaches the last effect.
Usage
Note: By default, on Linux you will have to run the program with root privileges, however, you can remedy this by adding the following udev
rule:
- 2021 Models:
# /etc/udev/rules.d/99-kblight.rules
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="048d", ATTR{idProduct}=="c965", MODE="0666"
- 2020 Models:
# /etc/udev/rules.d/99-kblight.rules
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="048d", ATTR{idProduct}=="c955", MODE="0666"
And then reloading the rules:
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules && sudo udevadm trigger
With GUI
Execute the file by double-clicking on it or running it from a console without arguments.
Via the command line
Usage:
legion-kb-rgb [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND]
Examples:
- Getting the help prompt
legion-kb-rgb --help
- Setting the keyboard to red
legion-kb-rgb Static 255,0,0,255,0,0,255,0,0,255,0,0
- Using the SmoothWave effect going to the left with speed
4
and brightness at high
legion-kb-rgb -s 4 -b 2 -d Left SmoothWave
Compatibility
This program has been tested to work on the 4 zone keyboard of the Legion 5 2020, Legion 5 2021 and Legion 5 Pro models on both Windows and Linux.
"How about X model"
- Legion 7(i): Won't work, the backlight on these is per-key and uses a different way of communicating.
- Any variant with a white backlight: Haven't figured out how to talk to this one yet, but given the limited number of states (off, low, high) there's not many effects I'd be able to add anyways.
Building from source
Prerequisites
- Rust
- Git
-
Ninja
- If building
fltk-rs
with theuse-ninja
feature. (On by default)
- If building
- On Linux, you'll need additional dependencies:
Ubuntu
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y libpango1.0-dev libx11-dev libxext-dev libxft-dev libxinerama-dev libxcursor-dev libxrender-dev libxfixes-dev libudev-dev nasm libxcb-randr0-dev libusb-1.0-0-dev libdbus-1-dev
Arch Linux
sudo pacman -S nasm cmake
Using cargo-make
Works on both Windows and Linux.
- Install
cargo-make
cargo install cargo-make
- Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/4JX/L5P-Keyboard-RGB.git
- Build the project
cd L5P-Keyboard-RGB/
cargo make build-release
Building manually
- Download and bootstrap VCPKG
- You'll need to set an environment variable called
VCPKG_INSTALLATION_ROOT
pointing to the directory where you downloaded and bootstrapped VCPKG.
- You'll need to set an environment variable called
Windows
- Download the necessary dependencies
vcpkg update && vcpkg install libvpx:x64-windows-static libyuv:x64-windows-static
- Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/4JX/L5P-Keyboard-RGB.git
- Build the project
cd L5P-Keyboard-RGB/
cargo build --release
Linux
- Download the necessary dependencies
vcpkg update && vcpkg install libvpx libyuv
- Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/4JX/L5P-Keyboard-RGB.git
- Build the project
cd L5P-Keyboard-RGB/
cargo build --release
Crashes, freezes, etc
I cannot guarantee this solution will work for anyone but myself. That being said feel free to open an issue if you encounter any of these problems on the issues tab.
Thanks to legendk95#0574 (272711294338072577) over at discord for initially reverse engineering the way to talk to the keyboard.