Chapter 22 Tools

22.6 Wake On LAN

Wake On LAN (WOL) allows you to remotely turn on a device on the network. To use this feature the remote hardware (for example the network adapter on your computer) must support Wake On LAN.

You need to know the MAC address of the remote device. It may be on a label on the device or in it’s documentation.

Click Maintenance > Tools > Wake On LAN to use this feature.

Note: The NBG-460N can only wake up remote devices that exist in it’s ARP table. For the remote device to exist in the NBG-460N’s ARP table it should have had a prior connection with the NBG-460N.

Figure 180 Maintenance > Tools > Wake On LAN

The following table describes the labels in this screen.

Table 113 Maintenance > Tools > Wake On LAN

LABEL

DESCRIPTION

Target’s MAC

Enter the MAC Address of the device on the network that will be powered

Address

on. A MAC address consists of six hexadecimal character pairs.

 

 

Wake up

Click this to turn on the specified device. The status bar will refresh and

 

indicate either Ready or MAC Address error.

 

If it displays Ready you should check if the remote device has turned on.

 

If the status bar displays MAC Address error it means you may have

 

typed the MAC Address incorrectly. Make sure you are entering it in the

 

correct format.

 

 

22.7 Green

Green is the energy-conserving feature of your NBG-460N.

When the NBG-460N detects no traffic in the network (LAN, WAN and WLAN), it switches to low power mode. The device cannot send or receive packets during this sleep time. It reboots the device after several minutes and starts the cycle again. This feature is enabled by default.

NBG-460N User’s Guide

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ZyXEL Communications wireless n gigbit router zyxel Wake On LAN, Green, 295, Indicate either Ready or MAC Address error