This section describes battery-specific entries in the INF file. For more information about creating and distributing INF files and installing drivers, see Creating an INF File and INF File Sections and Directives.

The INF Models section specifies the PnP hardware ID of the battery (shown as pnpid in the example). If the device is enumerated through ACPI, this section must also specify the EISA-style ID (shown as acpidevnum). For information about creating these IDs, see the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, which is available through the ACPI / Power Management website.


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In the INF DDInstall section (named NewBatt_Inst in the example), an INF CopyFiles directive copies the battery class driver (Battc.sys) and the new miniclass driver (NewBatt.sys) to the destination specified in the DestinationDirs directive.

The INF DDInstall.Services section includes an INF AddService directive that specifies additional information about the battery driver. A battery driver's INF file should indicate that the driver is a kernel driver that uses normal error handling and starts during initialization of the operating system. Battery drivers specify the load order group Extended Base.

Note: If you are using USB Type-C charging, please ensure that the USB Type-C port on your computer supports battery charging and power delivery for your laptop. If you are unsure about the functionality of the USB Type-C port, you can refer to this article to download the user manual specific to your computer model: How to search for and download user manuals.

The current design of ASUS Notebooks come with built-in RSOC (Relative State Of Charge) and the purpose is to prolong the overall lifespan of the battery. The description below can explain this phenomenon:

Please make sure whether you set up Battery Health Charging in MyASUS (for some models, the Battery Health Charging is a separate app). In order to protect the battery, Battery Health Charging allows you to set your battery's maximum power of ROSC (Relative State Of Charge) which helps extend the battery's lifespan. Here you can learn more about the introduction of ASUS Battery Health Charging.

The Microsoft ACPI Control Method Battery Driver service is a kernel mode driver. If Microsoft ACPI Control Method Battery Driver fails to start, the error is logged. Windows 10 startup proceeds, but a message box is displayed informing you that the CmBatt service has failed to start.

I am in need of some help. A couple of months ago, I was cleaning my Surface Pro 7's drive in order to optimize and free up space using CCleaner. In doing so, I believe that I accidentally deleted some key drivers used for power management, battery monitoring, and battery display (how I managed to royally screw up so bad is a question I ask myself every day). Normally you'd think it'd be an easy fix, but it has been anything but easy.

This is where I go over everything that I have done that I could possibly think of. I may be tech savvy, but I am not attuned to digging below the surface level of software. I have reset back to the last windows update, soft reset my surface (kept files and apps), hard reset my surface (wiped everything and start fresh), installed a fresh version of windows from Microsoft, installed the Create Windows 11 Installation Media tool, installed Windows 11 Disk Image (ISO), ran an in-place upgrade for windows 11, and downloaded the latest Surface Pro 7 drivers and firmware and I still cannot get the battery icon/drivers to work. I'm at the point where I don't know what to do next and all of the guides I try to lookup still have the battery drivers installed but they are either hidden or just not operating. There are no hidden drivers under device manager and the only thing that I can see that is an issue is the Surface Serial Hub Driver which has an error flag for: "This device cannot start. (Code 10)

Note: This is not a major issue in the sense that I cannot use my Surface whatsoever. Daily issues include: battery life has been noticeably affected, cannot monitor battery life at all, device shuts off without warning when the battery is dead, and date code and device memory does not update to current date and time until the device has been on for about 30 minutes or so and is essentially stuck in the last place and time that I had my Surface on.


I am an old time CCleaner user. I suppose you are right, there isn't too much of a need to keep it around. Especially after what happened. However, I have done a fresh install of the entire OS a couple of times as well as scrubbed and replaced all Surface Pro 7 drivers and firmware with no such luck as to getting back my battery icon and drivers.

ah I see what you've done. you most likely have to clean install Windows, not upgrade it. Clean the drive and install windows. The reason for this is that I think you've deleted the internal windows drivers that handle those functions.

@Joris M. you are my hero. I had the same problem, but my beginning was with the Program "DriverMax" an program which updates driver. . .

Thx so much!!! I have this problem since two weeks and round about 20h I had to do with that. . .

This didn't work for me but it gave me the idea of just rolling back all of my intel drivers using Snappy driver and only updating them again through the device manager. Then I got a code 45 on the surface serial hub driver instead of the code 10 I had previously so I tried reinstalling the driver again and now my battery icon is back on the task bar and everything seems to be in order. Not sure which thing exactly made it work again since I tried so many things but I am just glad its fixed. :')

OMFG! Thank you Joris et al. I've had this issue since I purchased this over a year ago. The battery still functioned but without it being "detected" there was no way to know how much battery was left and no low battery warnings. I mostly use it at home so it hasn't been a huge issue, but I cannot believe how much work it was to try and find a solution to this and then how easy the fix ultimately was.

By reinstalling my Lenovo laptop's battery drivers and disconnecting its battery and then reconnecting it, I got my laptop's battery back to charging when it's plugged in. With differences in manufacturers, your mileage may vary. If you encountered this plugged-in-not-charging problem and found a fix that differs from mine, please describe your method in the comments below.

However, I bought a new battery to see whether the issue lay with my original battery, and it worked fine for a while before it also succumbed to the issue. Now the new battery no longer charges even after repeating the above process. My original battery seems to charge temporarily after I repeat the above process.

This may be not a problem but it should be a feature of your energy manager or power manager driver. I am using Lenovo laptop and in this the new power manager driver have the feature that you can put a battery into conservation mode that protect battery to charge above 60% (in lenovo limit is 60%) after that it shows plugged in but not charging. This is feature is useful when you want to continuously use laptop without worrying about charging of battery. And I also observed that this feature still remain even if you change OS, shutdown and than charge it. The only way to turn off the conservation mode is to off from the same software again. So check your laptops power manager driver may be you can find this type of feature with the name conservation mode or any other name and turn it off.

In my Lenovo Laptop I've Found the way to turn off the feature which I've mentioned above. The trick is very simple. I shut down the computer and remove the battery and long press the power button without any power source (around 40 second).

For HP laptop there is a new power management tool/driver which actually (if turn on) try to use AC power after a certain % of battery draining. In my case even if I have the power on my battery drain constantly upto 15% and then stays there. Its annoying if you are not aware about it and if you are planning to use your laptop on battery for longer time turn off this feature first.

I had this problem with my refurbished Dell Latitude E6400. I tried everything suggested on sites like this one. Nothing worked. I tried swapping the supplied transformer (output 19.5v; 4.62A) for an old one I have (output 19.5v; 3.34A). Hey presto! Not only did the battery start charging but things that had slowed down were suddenly good as new.

Once you've done so, right click 'Batteries' and then 'Scan for hardware changes'. One it has readded the drivers, the battery icon should pop up again on your taskbar and report that it is now charging.

To update your BIOS, first, you need to follow our step-by-step guide, then you need to remove your battery and connect the laptop to the charger. If your laptop works without the battery, you can proceed with updating BIOS.

If the battery on your computer, or even mobile, is only charging to 80%, this is likely because Battery Life Extender is turned on. 


Battery Life Extender sets the maximum battery charge level to 80% to extend your battery life. So, turn it off if you want to charge the battery up to 100%. ff782bc1db

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