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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GUACAMOLE-513?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Nick Couchman updated GUACAMOLE-513:
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    Fix Version/s: 1.2.0

> Wake on LAN integration
> -----------------------
>
>                 Key: GUACAMOLE-513
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GUACAMOLE-513
>             Project: Guacamole
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>            Reporter: Matt Blecha
>            Assignee: Nick Couchman
>            Priority: Minor
>             Fix For: 1.2.0
>
>
> I'm beating this horse back to life from the old issue tracker as I do 
> believe this is a rather important feature.
> I know it was stated a day or two ago in the old issue tracker that there was 
> better justification necessary for this to be considered. Seeing as this 
> appears to be supported by both Microsoft in their RD Gateway and in Citrix's 
> gateway products since ~2014, there appears to be a fairly reasonable 
> justification for such a feature already in the business community, as well 
> as demand (seeing as Citrix made a fairly prominent announcement about it.)
>  
> ===Begin TL;DR===
>  
> We love Guacamole in terms of performance (even when most of our users opted 
> to go the VNC route, despite having the RDP option made available to them), 
> mobile device operation, ease of use and administration and the pure 
> brain-dead simplicity of implementation and integration. (Thanks to the 
> developer who wrote that installation script, we were zero to deployed and 
> operating in less than 15 minutes, VM server spin-up included!)
> That being said, we may be forced to abandon the whole infrastructure on 
> nearly 500 devices (and growing fast) in favor of a solution that is not as 
> efficient, yet provides one feature that we dearly need.
> From my research (not as a coder, but serious DevOps experience) it's 
> relatively trivial to craft and broadcast a magic packet in Java (A GitHub 
> search yields several project with examples averaging about ~75 LOC, 
> including sanity checking.) Adding in a sort of "timeout hold-off" should 
> yield less than an additional 100 LOC, and user interface adjustments, 
> probably another few dozen or so. (Semi-educated guess.) All that would be 
> left then is to add an optional MAC address field to the proper table and 
> connection form, maybe a checkbox to enable WOL.
> If WOL is simply too hard to code into Guacamole, then a more expansive set 
> of classes in the connection API would go a long way towards being able to 
> develop an extension. (From what I can see of the API docs, there appears to 
> be one call that would allow us to start the WOL process, but there are 
> several others necessary, for example; being able to hold off the connection 
> timeout while the remote station completes waking up. We do, after all, want 
> this to be a seamless process to the end user.)
>  
> ===End TL;DR===
>  
> It seems to me that there are several reasonable use cases for such a 
> feature, even if it is an extension and not a core component, though it seems 
> this would probably be easier to merge into core as it would work more 
> elegantly with some database integration, which I did not see in the API 
> docs. (Admittedly, might not have looked closely enough, and I don't really 
> code Java, so I'm not sure what's in that section.)
> I do think this would go a long way in scoring a decent amount of points for 
> this project. It seems like there are others out there who support such a 
> feature, hacky as it may be in some products.
>  



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