A fast, lightweight alternative to MSI Center for MSI laptops, written in C#.
Please read the whole README (or at least the Supported Laptops and FAQ sections) before downloading.
- While this program is mostly complete, I still consider it to be alpha-quality software!
- While measures are taken to reduce the program crash chance, you will still likely encounter bugs while using this program, especially if feeding the program garbage configs.
- This program requires low-level access to some of your computer hardware to apply settings. While no issues should arise from this, I (Sparronator9999) and any other contributers shall not be held responsible if this program fries your computer.
- Additionally, if you do something silly with the program like turn off all your fans while running under full load, we will not be held responsible for any damage you cause to your own hardware from your use of this program.
- Linux is not yet supported. Please don't beg me for Linux support, it will come when I can be bothered (and when I figure out how to run background services/daemons on Linux).
- This program, repository and its authors are not affiliated with Micro-Star International Co., Ltd. in any way, shape, or form.
- Fan control: Change the fan curves for your CPU and GPU fans, including fan speeds, temperature thresholds, and Full Blast (a.k.a. Cooler Boost in MSI Center). This allows you to fix a curve that is not aggressive enough under full load, or to turn your fans off when your computer is idle.
- Performance mode: MSI laptops have their own performance mode setting (not to be confused with Windows' built-in power plans). You can change it here.
- Charging threshold: This program can limit how much your laptop's battery charges to, which can help reduce battery degradation, especially if you leave your laptop plugged in all the time.
- Lightweight: YAMDCC takes up less than a megabyte of disk space when installed, and is designed to be light on your laptop's CPU.
- Configurable: Almost all settings (including those not accessible through the config GUI) can be changed with the power of XML.
Currently, there is only a config for the MSI GF63 Thin 11SC, but other MSI laptops with a 10th-gen or later Intel CPU should also work, just with an incorrect default fan curve.
An update will add support for reading the default fan curve of more MSI laptops (including 9th-gen and older).
Other laptop brands are not officially supported. You can still try and make your own config, but chances are you're looking for NoteBook FanControl instead.
The following laptops have been tested by the community and are confirmed to be working:
- MSI Katana GF66 12UG (thanks @porkmanager)
- MSI Vector GP78 HX 13V (thanks @Twisted6)
- MSI Raider GE66 12UGS (thanks @grimy400)
- The config format is very likely to change multiple times during YAMDCC's development before release, and as such will break in new updates. Check the git history before updating.
- Please avoid asking me (or other people) in the issue tracker to create a config for you. Unless we have your specific laptop model (which we probably don't), we will not be able to help you outside of the general instructions.
Feature | MSI Center | YAMDCC |
---|---|---|
Installed size | ~950 MB¹ | ~1 MB¹ |
Fan control | ✔ | ✔ |
Temp. threshold control | ❌ | ✔ |
Multi-fan profile support | ❌ | ✔ |
Charge threshold setting | Limited² | ✔ |
Perf. mode setting | ✔ | ✔ |
Win/Fn key swap | ✔ | ✔ |
Win key disable | ✔ | ❌ |
Hardware monitoring | ✔ | Limited³ |
Other MSI Center features | ✔ | ❌ |
Open source | ❌ | ✔ |
1: As of v2.0.38, MSI Center takes about 950 MB of storage space when counting the UWP app (749 MB) and the files installed on first launch to C:\Program Files (x86)\MSI
(205 MB). YAMDCC's installed size is based on the Release build of commit 0422376, and includes all unzipped program files, but excludes config XMLs.
2: MSI Center only supports setting the charge threshold to 60%, 80%, or 100%, while YAMDCC can set this to anything between 0 and 100% (with 0 meaning charge to 100% always).
3: YAMDCC only supports monitoring the CPU/GPU temperatures and fan speeds via EC.
Below are some changes I would like to make before a 1.0 release of YAMDCC:
- Config generation for MSI laptops (implemented in service, UI in progress)
- This would only work because many MSI laptops have almost identical EC register locations for all the relevent settings we change
- The only thing we need to do is get the default fan curve from the user's laptop, and add it to the default fan profile.
- Revamp IPC between service and config applications (started)
- Currently, there is no "acknowledgement" system for commands sent to the service, even for commands that expect data to be returned. This means no errors if the service crashes before fulfilling a received command.
- Fix any remaining bugs before the 1.0 release.
- I will start releasing betas once the above points are complete.
Below are some planned features for potential future releases:
- Keyboard shortcut support (requested by @grimy400)
- CLI support
- Development of a CLI application for YAMDCC has started, but isn't publicly available yet
- It hasn't been updated for quite a while (to the point where it still has the project's original name) and is missing a lot of features.
- Development of a CLI application for YAMDCC has started, but isn't publicly available yet
- Support for editing laptop config registers using the GUI/CLI
- This would allow for creating configs for other laptop brands from the config UI
- Currently, the only way to do this is to edit the XML directly
- Plugin system for additional optional features
- .NET support
- Mandatory for Linux support
- The GUI should compile on .NET 8 (and in fact has been compiled on .NET 8 before).
- The Windows service on the other hand... is going to be interesting. Even
with the
Microsoft.Windows.Compatibility
package installed, I still wasn't able to get the service to run without issues.
- Linux support (not guaranteed)
- Now this would require some figuring out, and may end up being a seperate project that's compatible with this project's configs.
Development builds are available through GitHub Actions.
Alternatively, if you don't have a GitHub account, you can download the latest build from nightly.link.
(You probably want the Release
build, unless you're debugging issues with the program)
Alternatively, you can build the program yourself.
- Install Visual Studio 2022 with the
.NET Desktop Development
workload checked. - Download the code repository, or clone it with
git
. - Extract the downloaded code, if needed.
- Open
YAMDCC.sln
in Visual Studio. - Click
Build
>Build Solution
to build everything. - Your output, assuming default build settings, is located in
YAMDCC.GUI\bin\Debug\net48\
. - ???
- Profit!
Make sure to only use matching yamdccsvc.exe
and YAMDCC.exe
together, otherwise you
may encounter issues (that means net stop yamdccsvc
first, then compile).
- Follow steps 1-3 above to install Visual Studio and download the code.
- Open
Developer Command Prompt for VS 2022
andcd
to your project directory. - Run
msbuild /t:restore
to restore the solution, including NuGet packages. - Run
msbuild YAMDCC.sln /p:platform="Any CPU" /p:configuration="Debug"
to build the project, substitutingDebug
withRelease
(orAny CPU
withx86
orx64
) if you want a release build instead. - Your output should be located in
YAMDCC.GUI\bin\Debug\net48\
, assuming you built with the above unmodified command. - ???
- Profit!
If your question isn't already answered in the FAQ or issues megathread, feel free to open an issue. Please make sure to use the correct issue template for your problem.
See the build instructions to build this project.
If you would like to contribute to the project with bug fixes, new features, or new configs, feel free to open a pull request. Please include the following:
- Bug Fixes/Improvements: Describe the changes you made and why they are important or useful.
New Config:Not currently accepting new configs. Wait for the config generation feature to be finished.
Windows 10 and 11 (64-bit).
32-bit Windows 10 should also work, but you really should be using 64-bit Windows when possible in 2024.
Older versions of Windows that support .NET Framework 4.8 may also work, but with no support from me.
Soon™.
Use one of the many other projects on GitHub instead while you wait.
YAMDCC works by accessing your laptop's embedded controller (aka, the EC). Many settings that can be configured with MSI Center are stored here, including fan curve, performance mode, and the Win/Fn key swap setting.
-
Because admin privileges are required to install kernel drivers, and...
-
For security reasons, only programs with admin privileges are allowed to communicate with the YAMDCC service once it's running.
Because communicating with the EC requires low-level hardware access, something only possible from within the kernel. This program achieves this with WinRing0.
Yes, however YAMDCC mitigates this by installing the driver such that only programs run with administrator privileges can communicate with the driver.
Why wasn't this done by the driver itself in the first place, you might ask? Honestly, I don't know how this slipped through during development, but here we are. Unfortunately the updated fork of WinRing0 that does fix this vulnerability driver-side doesn't have a binary release due to Microsoft's strict driver signing requirements.
NOTE: If YAMDCC finds the driver already installed, it may try to use that (potentially vulnerable) driver instead. If it was installed with, e.g. LibreHardwareMonitor, you should be fine, as they implement the same fix that YAMDCC does.
Please read the disclaimer, especially the bold text, if you haven't already.
Again, see above.
Reset your EC (MSI laptops only):
Shut down the laptop if it's on (force shut down if needed), then find the EC reset button (on the GF63 Thin 11SC, it's a small hole located on the bottom of the laptop next to the charge port) and press it with the end of a paperclip, SIM ejector, or similarly small tool for at least 5 seconds, then try rebooting.
If the issue persists, try disconnecting all power sources, including the laptop's CMOS/clock battery and "main" battery (requires disassembly of laptop). Leave disconnected for a few seconds, then re-connect everything, re-assemble and attempt a reboot. This will reset your BIOS settings.
Users of other laptop brands will need to look up instructions for their laptop.
Due to WinForms limitations, no.
Technical explanation: A few specific WinForms controls used by YAMDCC look really bad
when trying to recolour them to be dark themed. Also, built-in dialog boxes (for C# programmers,
think MessageBox.Show
) cannot be recoloured from their default white theme. Also, I have little
to no experience with other UI kits (e.g. WPF).
Probably not for Windows (unless it goes EOL, which I doubt will happen for a while).
If Linux support ever comes, it will be using .NET (since .NET Framework isn't supported on Linux).
Copyright © 2023-2024 Sparronator9999.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
This project makes use of the following third-party libraries:
- My fork of Named Pipe Wrapper for
communication between the service and UI program (called
YAMDCC.IPC
in the source files). - WinRing0 for low-level hardware access required to read/write the EC.