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Forum Discussion
llevet
Nov 01, 2005Aspirant
Wake up ReadyNas by network ?
Hi,
It will bee cool to have the possibility to wake up the ReadyNas by the network (with magical packet like 'ether-wake MAC ADDR' under linux).
So, it is maybe not possible, because when the readyNas is shutdown, the LAN interface is down ... It is because there is no low power on motherboard after a shutdown ? (no wake up lan ?)
Thank's to look at that ...
Ludo.
It will bee cool to have the possibility to wake up the ReadyNas by the network (with magical packet like 'ether-wake MAC ADDR' under linux).
So, it is maybe not possible, because when the readyNas is shutdown, the LAN interface is down ... It is because there is no low power on motherboard after a shutdown ? (no wake up lan ?)
Thank's to look at that ...
Ludo.
58 Replies
Replies have been turned off for this discussion
- bbaraniecLuminary
Keith_Beef wrote: So, leaving out WOL was a marketing decision to keep the price down by $5.
The thing is, WOL really is a very convenient feature in home networking. You add some really simple switch to the HTPC interface to send the magic packet to the NAS (like "wake up my media vault").
Simple configuration, simple operation. Even simpler that what I've done for now, with a scheduled wake-up every day at around 15h30 and shutdown at 03h00.
K.
So where it leads? Simply flaming which ain't really needed. I quite sure if it were only 5$ both duo and NV+ would have WoL. - beisser1Tutor
Keith_Beef wrote: chirpa wrote:
The NV+ is custom Sparc hardware. The ReadyNAS Pro, which is x86 based, does support WOL.Keith_Beef wrote: OK, I can live without it, but when just about every x86 architecture board from $50 and up has WOL
So, leaving out WOL was a marketing decision to keep the price down by $5.
The thing is, WOL really is a very convenient feature in home networking. You add some really simple switch to the HTPC interface to send the magic packet to the NAS (like "wake up my media vault").
Simple configuration, simple operation. Even simpler that what I've done for now, with a scheduled wake-up every day at around 15h30 and shutdown at 03h00.
K.
what aint there, aint there, and i doubt they will change the hardware after years on market, just to accomodate you.
if you need wake on lan, you should purchase a device that supports it (like all newer x86-based readynas).
i know thats not what you want to hear, but thats about the only thing you can do. whining about it wont change the facts. - Seppo1AspirantBUMMMMP!!!!!
Does the RND2000 purchased in June 2011 and latest firmware have the capability to Wake on Lan? - sphardy1ApprenticeNo - hardware limitation
- Seppo1AspirantDo you think just making the hard drives spin down after disuse is good enough to justify keeping it on 24/7?
- sphardy1ApprenticeThat works for me
- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredI don't get the disks to spin-down on my NAS because I even find the waiting for them to spin up again annoying (but it'd be a longer wait to boot the NAS when I need it on).
For those seeking to keep power usage down, using disk spin-down is a good compromise. Probably much cheaper than updating now to get a new NAS if you don't need it for any other reason atm. - Seppo1AspirantYea it's more about conserving the hard drive than power saving.
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