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Intel remote wake up
Intel remote wake up









  1. #Intel remote wake up update
  2. #Intel remote wake up driver
  3. #Intel remote wake up manual

Look for an ethernet card option ROM prompt Compile Kernel with patch (take some days to set up everything for this, not much time atm)

#Intel remote wake up update

No, nothing special i saw but I'll re-check this tomorrowĪnother thing: BIOS Update did not change anything, i'm on 2.60 (latest) now. see here: > When your system boots, do you get an ethernet card option ROM prompt? > How about do the LEDs of LAN ports operate at power-down state? > Try `ifconfig igb0 up wol` to add "up" option. Last things to check would be:ġ.) The patch Kaho Toshikazu send me (thank you very much) If theres something else i should check, feel free to point it out. With and without reboots to ensure state is available.

intel remote wake up

The "Device Manager" Part is for Windows i think, but i attached BIOS Screenshots for the EFI ACPI Configuration.Ģ.) PCI Devices Power On is enabled as described aboveģ.) Both LAN-Ports are Enabled (See lan_enabled.jpg) And the “PCI Devices Power On” isĮnabled in UEFI SETUP UTILITY > Advanced > ACPI Configuration. > Intel® Ethernet Connection > Power Management. Sure that the “Wake on Magic Packet from power off state” is enabled in Device Manager This motherboard supports Wake from on Board LAN.

#Intel remote wake up manual

Ok, i re-checked every possible setting that i found.ġ.) Hardware / Mainboard should support wake on lan according to the manual ( ), (10 in PDF): I also could provide a screenshot of BIOS settings, if it helps, but I'm 100% sure, WOL is enabled here. If you need any debug output or if i should re-check, wether WOL is working on linux, just ask - should not be too much effort to boot a linux usb stick. I think i checked all possible settings and as i remember WOL was working on Linux (although i'm not 100% sure here, its been a while.)

#Intel remote wake up driver

Perhaps the ASRock Rack C236 WSI has newer Intel NICs and the freebsd driver does not support WOL on these specific device versions. Is it possible, that it is not a hardware / hardware-version specific problem? In WOL-flags do not show up, although everything is configured correctly. Is there something else i could have missed? I activated WOL in BIOS (i checked twice) and addedĪnd tried different things with and without reboots. Media: Ethernet autoselect (10baseT/UTP ) Here are my # ifconfig igb0 # ifconfig igb0 It doesn't look like your devices have wake on lan active. There are no "WOL" flags in the ifconfig output.

intel remote wake up

Heres the log (xxx-ed out the # sysctl dev.igb.0.wakeĭev.em.0.wake: # ifconfig igb0 # ifconfig em0 # ifconfig igb0 The wake on lan tool i use cannot cause the problem, because it works with other devices on the same switch. Tried both interfaces with multiple reboots and shutdowns. unfortunately that did not fix the problem. If further information is needed feel free to ask. There is a closed bug ( ) about this topic, but it does not solve the problem on my hardware.

intel remote wake up

WOL Property is not listed on any device, although its enabled (see below)īoth interfaces don't support or show up WOL, although its enabled in BIOS and sysctl. WOL is enabled in BIOS / EFI (Latest BIOS Version 2.30) I would like to report, that wake on lan is not working on my ASRock Rack C236 WSI with 2 Intel NICs (pciconf -lv attached)











Intel remote wake up