So, consider that the packet may not be making it through any intermediary network device. I had a FIOS router and I had to perform a manual step to add a static route to the ARP cache (that Putty command you're trying to think of) of the router so that the router didn't forget about the NAS when the NAS was turned off. It's unlikely your sending system is blocking it, firewall rules don't usually prevent outbound packets. Any network devices between the system you're sending the packet from and the NAS _could_ be blocking the packet, which I believe is typically a UDP packet sent on port 7 or 9 (double check, it may even be 22). Second, in order for magic packet to work for WOL, you need to not only have your hardware set up to acknowledge the magic packet, the box has to actually GET the magic packet. I believe you can then `su root` with the same password, or just use sudo. IIRC you would `ssh or the equivalent Putty. But if you can log in to the UI as administrator, that should work for ssh. There used to be a secret password to ssh in with that varied by month and so on, I don't know if that's still true, it was used by Synology support to get into your machine in emergencies. If you have ssh enabled (default port 22), then you should be able to use Putty to ssh in with the same credentials as you use to log in administratively to the UI. If it means anything, when the system is powered off the LED's on the ethernet port are still active.ĭoes anyone have the definitive guide to setting up Wake on Lan and getting it to work?Ĭouple notes as I've gone through the ringer a few times on WOL.įirst, your root password is just your administrative user's password. There's a guide someone posted on here where you Putty in and enter a command but I can't for the life of me remember (or Synology have disabled it if what I've read elsewhere is true) my root password so I can't do this. I use task scheduler to start my NAS up at 7pm and to automatically shut it down at 2am, from what I've read this auto shutdown may not be putting it into the correct state in order to wake it up? Wake on LAN is enabled in the BIOS, it's enabled in DSM and I've set up in Synology Assistant yet whenever I use any apps to send the magic packet it does not wake up the system. I'm running Jun's Loader 1.02b with DSM 6.1.7 on a Gen8 Microserver, and as far as I know I have the proper MAC address for my ethernet1 port in the grub file. I've googled this and read every thread that shows up on this subject here but I'm still non the wiser how to get Wake On Lan to work.
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