Re: Wake up on LAN: kann etherwake nicht richtig benutzen

2004-03-03 Thread Kai Weber
* Tobias Krais [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Welchen Befehl muss ich eingeben, wenn ich z.B. einen Computer mit der
 MAC 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E aufwecken kann? etherwake 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E?

ether-wake 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E

Bei manchen Netzwerkkarten muß dieses Verhalten extra aktiviert werden.
Vielleicht schilderst du dein Problem nocheinmal genauer.

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  Kai Weber
» [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.glorybox.de   gpg-key: 0x594D4132


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Re: Wake up on LAN: kann etherwake nicht richtig benutzen

2004-03-03 Thread Tobias Krais
Hi Kai,

  Welchen Befehl muss ich eingeben, wenn ich z.B. einen Computer mit der
  MAC 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E aufwecken kann? etherwake 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E?
 
 ether-wake 00:50:BF:11:0B:0E

Es funktioniert! Ich habe die MAC wohl falsch eingegeben. Ausserdem darf
ich keinen Bindestrich zwischen ether und wake setzen, sondern schreibe
in einem Wort.

Danke nochmals,

Grssle, Tobi


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RE: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-16 Thread Joris Lambrecht
you're motherboard AND bios is supposed to support it to

-Original Message-
From: D-Man [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 11:47 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Wake Up on LAN


On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 04:56:10PM +0100, Barthazi Andras wrote:
| Hi!
| 
| I should have to write a Backup system at my
| company, and I need a program can wake up
| the workstations. I know that I have to send
| the the Magic code, do you know a program
| can solve it for me? And is it true, that
| I can just wake up a machine that suspended
| before (not a machine turned off -- with a
| motherboard under power)?
| 

I don't know much about WOL, but my ethernet card (LinkSys) has WOL
capability.  From what I gather, the ethernet card gets plugged into a
special plug on the motherboard (there is a cable on the card).  When
the ethernet card gets some signal, it sends the appropriate signal to
the motherboard, which then wakes up the system.  I don't know what
the signals are or how to config the system but I do know that the
motherboard must support it.

-D


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RE: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-16 Thread c-3
For WOL you need to know the node adress of the network card in 
the computer you want to wake up. Under Windows you can easily 
get it by winipcfg. But can someone tell me how to get it under 
linux?

Christian

 
 On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 04:56:10PM +0100, Barthazi Andras wrote:
 | Hi!
 | 
 | I should have to write a Backup system at my
 | company, and I need a program can wake up
 | the workstations. I know that I have to send
 | the the Magic code, do you know a program
 | can solve it for me? And is it true, that
 | I can just wake up a machine that suspended
 | before (not a machine turned off -- with a
 | motherboard under power)?
 | 



Re: RE: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-16 Thread romain lerallut
if you mean the MAC address, that info is provided by ifconfig if my memory is 
correct.


Romain

 Begin Original Message 
 From: c-3 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Fri, 16 Feb 2001 13:51:28 +0100
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Wake Up on LAN

For WOL you need to know the node adress of the network card in 
the computer you want to wake up. Under Windows you can easily 
get it by winipcfg. But can someone tell me how to get it under 
linux?

Christian

 
 On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 04:56:10PM +0100, Barthazi Andras wrote:
 | Hi!
 | 
 | I should have to write a Backup system at my
 | company, and I need a program can wake up
 | the workstations. I know that I have to send
 | the the Magic code, do you know a program
 | can solve it for me? And is it true, that
 | I can just wake up a machine that suspended
 | before (not a machine turned off -- with a
 | motherboard under power)?
 | 


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 End Original Message 




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Re: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-16 Thread Krzys Majewski
I use /usr/sbin/arp. 
There  are  programs that  build  WOL packets  out  there  - look  for
ether-wake.c, for example,
-chris


c-3 [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 For WOL you need to know the node adress of the network card in 
 the computer you want to wake up. Under Windows you can easily 
 get it by winipcfg. But can someone tell me how to get it under 
 linux?
 
 Christian
 
  
  On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 04:56:10PM +0100, Barthazi Andras wrote:
  | Hi!
  | 
  | I should have to write a Backup system at my
  | company, and I need a program can wake up
  | the workstations. I know that I have to send
  | the the Magic code, do you know a program
  | can solve it for me? And is it true, that
  | I can just wake up a machine that suspended
  | before (not a machine turned off -- with a
  | motherboard under power)?
  | 
 
 
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Re: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-15 Thread D-Man
On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 04:56:10PM +0100, Barthazi Andras wrote:
| Hi!
| 
| I should have to write a Backup system at my
| company, and I need a program can wake up
| the workstations. I know that I have to send
| the the Magic code, do you know a program
| can solve it for me? And is it true, that
| I can just wake up a machine that suspended
| before (not a machine turned off -- with a
| motherboard under power)?
| 

I don't know much about WOL, but my ethernet card (LinkSys) has WOL
capability.  From what I gather, the ethernet card gets plugged into a
special plug on the motherboard (there is a cable on the card).  When
the ethernet card gets some signal, it sends the appropriate signal to
the motherboard, which then wakes up the system.  I don't know what
the signals are or how to config the system but I do know that the
motherboard must support it.

-D



Re: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-15 Thread Oki DZ
On Wed, 14 Feb 2001, Barthazi Andras wrote:
 I should have to write a Backup system at my
 company, and I need a program can wake up
 the workstations. I know that I have to send
 the the Magic code, do you know a program
 can solve it for me? 

http://www.scyld.com/expert/wake-on-lan.html

And is it true, that
 I can just wake up a machine that suspended
 before (not a machine turned off -- with a
 motherboard under power)?

The program to wake up the machies is there, I have compiled it, but I
haven't tried it yet; I don't know the meaning of soft-powering-off a
machine. All I know is shutdown -h now or poweroff; on ATX boards, it
means that the machines would be shut down.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ man softpoweroff
No manual entry for softpoweroff
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ whereis softpoweroff
softpoweroff:

I think I still have problem here.

Oki





Re: Wake Up on LAN

2001-02-15 Thread mike polniak
Oki DZ wrote:
 On Wed, 14 Feb 2001, Barthazi Andras wrote:
  I should have to write a Backup system at my
  company, and I need a program can wake up
  the workstations. I know that I have to send
  the the Magic code, do you know a program
  can solve it for me? 
 
 http://www.scyld.com/expert/wake-on-lan.html
 
 And is it true, that
  I can just wake up a machine that suspended
  before (not a machine turned off -- with a
  motherboard under power)?
 
 The program to wake up the machies is there, I have compiled it, but I
 haven't tried it yet; I don't know the meaning of soft-powering-off a
 machine. All I know is shutdown -h now or poweroff; on ATX boards, it
 means that the machines would be shut down.

According to my Abit KT7 mb manual: Soft-Off by PWRBTN is
activated when the user presses the power button for more than four
seconds, while the system is in the working state, then the system will
transition to the soft-off(Power off by software).
When the Wake-Up on LAN is enabled, a wake up event, like using
the PCnet Magic Packet utility will awaken a system which has been
powered down.
Of course the exact method of operation may vary with different
mother boards.
-- 

~~~