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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Trouble Configuring Wake On Lan Post 302896644 by hicksd8 on Tuesday 8th of April 2014 12:29:47 PM
Old 04-08-2014
I'm sorry if what I'm about write is obvious to you but since you say that you've never set up wake-on-lan before I might say some things which might help.

Firstly, what hardware is it? Your hardware must support wake-on-lan before this stands any chance of working. Sometimes this feature is built into the motherboard, sometimes it can work from an add-in network card. In the latter case it's often necessary to connect a tiny cable from the add-in card down onto the motherboard.

Certainly check your BIOS for any mention of wake-on-lan and ensure it's set as allowed in there.

Always test with a 'magic packet' sender from another system very close on the network to ensure the packet isn't clobbered by a firewall or some such. There are many magic packet generators; many Windows based. It doesn't matter a stuff where the magic packet comes from, if the hardware is switched off (but has volts input) it should turn on.

Hope that helps. Do report back progress, or lack of.
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PMSET(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  PMSET(1)

NAME
pmset -- modify power management settings SYNOPSIS
pmset [-a | -b | -c] [dim minutes] [spindown minutes] [sleep minutes] [womp 1/0] [ring 1/0] [autorestart 1/0] [dps 1/0] [reduce 1/0] [powerbutton 1/0] [lidwake 1/0] [acwake 1/0] [boot] pmset -g [disk | live | cap | sched] DESCRIPTION
pmset changes and reads power management settings such as idle sleep timing, wake on administrative access, automatic restart on power loss, etc. SETTING
The -a, -b, -c flags determine whether the settings apply to battery (-b), charger (wall power) (-c), or all (-a). Use a minutes argument of 0 to set the idle time to never. pmset must be run as root. The boot argument tells power management that system bootup is complete. Loginwindow handles this on a normal Mac OS X system. GETTING
The -g flag outputs the settings currently in use (same as -g live ). -g disk will tell you the settings on disk. -g cap will tell you which power management features the machine supports. -g sched will show scheduled startup/wake and shutdown/sleep events. ARGUMENTS
dim - display dim timer (value in minutes) spindown - disk spindown timer (value in minutes) sleep - system sleep timer (value in minutes) womp - wake on ethernet magic packet (value = 0/1) ring - wake on modem ring (value = 0/1) autorestart - automatic restart on power loss (value = 0/1) dps - dynamically change processor speed based on load (value = 0/1) reduce - reduce processor speed (value = 0/1) powerbutton - sleep the machine when power button is pressed (value = 0/1) lidwake - wake the machine when the laptop lid(or clamshell) is opened (value = 0/1) acwake - wake the machine when power source (AC/battery) is changed (value = 0/1) OTHER ARGUMENTS
These arguments don't directly affect power management settings: boot - tell the kernel that system boot is complete EXAMPLES
pmset -b dim 5 pmset -a dim 10 spindown 10 sleep 30 womp 1 pmset -g live FILES
All changes made through pmset are saved in a persistent preferences file (per-system, not per-user) at /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/com.apple.PowerManagement.plist pmset modifies the same file that System Preferences Energy Saver modifies. Darwin August 19, 2002 Darwin
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