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#1
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wake-on-lan cable goes where?
where do i plug my wake-on-lan cable on my motherboard? i found the location
on the network card. the system is a dell dimention 4300. here is the manual, the mobo specs are on page 68. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...0/2h930bk1.pdf if it doesn't have a mobo port can i split it into the psu some how? -- |
#2
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On Thu, 05 Aug 2004 17:56:59 GMT, "James"
wrote: where do i plug my wake-on-lan cable on my motherboard? i found the location on the network card. the system is a dell dimention 4300. here is the manual, the mobo specs are on page 68. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...0/2h930bk1.pdf if it doesn't have a mobo port can i split it into the psu some how? Some motherboards don't have a wake-on-lan header on them, but you might find a setting in the bios for waking on PCI *devices*. Don't know about that specific motherboard. Do NOT splice it into the power supply leads. |
#3
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"kony" wrote in message ...
Do NOT splice it into the power supply leads. That would be possible. AFIAK, one is ground, one is 5 volts and one is supplied 5 volts when WOL is activated. The first 2 would be easy enough and you could use the 5v out to activate a relay (or some other mechanism) which activates the power button. -- Michael Culley |
#4
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"James" wrote in message
... where do i plug my wake-on-lan cable on my motherboard? i found the location on the network card. the system is a dell dimention 4300. here is the manual, the mobo specs are on page 68. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...0/2h930bk1.pdf if it doesn't have a mobo port can i split it into the psu some how? -- If thats a relatively new machine and its a relatively new NIC you're putting in it, you wont need a WOL cable because power management will be handled through a PCI 2.2 compliant bus - maybe thats why there's no connector on the motherboard. Alot of Dell machines have proprietary PSU connections but even aside from not knowing which wire does what, the PSU wires are SUPPLY only (other than the switches and power good signal wire). You'll be able to set it up properly without interfering with the PSU. Paul |
#5
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On Fri, 6 Aug 2004 10:37:21 +1000, "Michael Culley"
wrote: "kony" wrote in message ... Do NOT splice it into the power supply leads. That would be possible. AFIAK, one is ground, one is 5 volts and one is supplied 5 volts when WOL is activated. The first 2 would be easy enough and you could use the 5v out to activate a relay (or some other mechanism) which activates the power button. When there isn't a WOL header there is no need to do it, the feature is enabled with bios settings and modem driver properties. |
#6
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"kony" wrote in message ...
When there isn't a WOL header there is no need to do it, the feature is enabled with bios settings and modem driver properties. Depends on the age of the board. I agree doing a solder job would be the last resort but it should be possible if required on fairly old boards. -- Michael Culley |
#7
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heres some specs about my machine, it says that remote wake up doesn't work
on S5 modes and i did some research s5 mode means shutdown. http://support.jp.dell.com/docs/syst...0/syssetup.htm does that mean even if i have a pci 2.2 this won't work? (cuz it doesnt seem to work. could it because my nic doesn't suport the pci 2.2 remote wake up? its an intel pro/100+ nic and the drivers do have wake on lan but it doesn't work) "Paul Murphy" wrote in message ... "James" wrote in message ... where do i plug my wake-on-lan cable on my motherboard? i found the location on the network card. the system is a dell dimention 4300. here is the manual, the mobo specs are on page 68. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...0/2h930bk1.pdf if it doesn't have a mobo port can i split it into the psu some how? -- If thats a relatively new machine and its a relatively new NIC you're putting in it, you wont need a WOL cable because power management will be handled through a PCI 2.2 compliant bus - maybe thats why there's no connector on the motherboard. Alot of Dell machines have proprietary PSU connections but even aside from not knowing which wire does what, the PSU wires are SUPPLY only (other than the switches and power good signal wire). You'll be able to set it up properly without interfering with the PSU. Paul |
#8
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On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 22:10:07 GMT, "James"
wrote: heres some specs about my machine, it says that remote wake up doesn't work on S5 modes and i did some research s5 mode means shutdown. http://support.jp.dell.com/docs/syst...0/syssetup.htm does that mean even if i have a pci 2.2 this won't work? (cuz it doesnt seem to work. could it because my nic doesn't suport the pci 2.2 remote wake up? its an intel pro/100+ nic and the drivers do have wake on lan but it doesn't work) Where does it say it doesn't work? I saw the part that read: -------------------------- "Allows remote Wake on LAN. (Dell does not support Wake on LAN in S3 or S5 Suspend Modes on this Dimension™ system.) The default is Off." -------------------------- That Dell "does not support..." doesn't necessarily mean it won't work, only that they don't SUPPORT it, as a matter of providing technical assistance or warranty to an end-user based on that feature. That the setting exists is in itself is a sign that you do have the feature. There may be another setting that we are missing, a Dell forum or newsgroup may be better able to assist you. I do think the Intel NIC supports this feature without the WOL cable, as a PCI event, but perhaps Dell hid and disabled that part of your bios setup... OEMs LOVE to disable and hide features. |
#9
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heres where i read the s5 isn't suported. i assumed it ment that it doesn't
work: http://forums.us.dell.com/supportfor...s5+Wake#M18367 the "remote wake up" option is enabled in my Bios. i updated my intel nic drivers and they have a remote wake up with magic packet option that i selected then i used amd's magic packet application to send a magic packet to that computer's mac and ip address and nothing happend. "kony" wrote in message ... On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 22:10:07 GMT, "James" wrote: heres some specs about my machine, it says that remote wake up doesn't work on S5 modes and i did some research s5 mode means shutdown. http://support.jp.dell.com/docs/syst...0/syssetup.htm does that mean even if i have a pci 2.2 this won't work? (cuz it doesnt seem to work. could it because my nic doesn't suport the pci 2.2 remote wake up? its an intel pro/100+ nic and the drivers do have wake on lan but it doesn't work) Where does it say it doesn't work? I saw the part that read: -------------------------- "Allows remote Wake on LAN. (Dell does not support Wake on LAN in S3 or S5 Suspend Modes on this DimensionT system.) The default is Off." -------------------------- That Dell "does not support..." doesn't necessarily mean it won't work, only that they don't SUPPORT it, as a matter of providing technical assistance or warranty to an end-user based on that feature. That the setting exists is in itself is a sign that you do have the feature. There may be another setting that we are missing, a Dell forum or newsgroup may be better able to assist you. I do think the Intel NIC supports this feature without the WOL cable, as a PCI event, but perhaps Dell hid and disabled that part of your bios setup... OEMs LOVE to disable and hide features. |
#10
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On Mon, 09 Aug 2004 20:11:43 GMT, "James"
wrote: heres where i read the s5 isn't suported. i assumed it ment that it doesn't work: http://forums.us.dell.com/supportfor...s5+Wake#M18367 the "remote wake up" option is enabled in my Bios. i updated my intel nic drivers and they have a remote wake up with magic packet option that i selected then i used amd's magic packet application to send a magic packet to that computer's mac and ip address and nothing happend. You might see if Intel provides a utility on their website (or even on the driver floppy) to enable or configure this. |
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