Remote Wake Up lets you remotely wake up a single node or a group of powered-down nodes in your network if the network card on the node is enabled for Wake-on-LAN (WOL).
Waking up a device that has multiple NICs (Network Interface Cards) is successful only if one or more of the NICs is configured for a subnet that contains the device that is broadcasting the WOL packet.
IMPORTANT:On a Windows 8 machine, Wake-On-LAN is supported only in sleep (S3) or hibernate (S4) mode and not in shutdown mode. For more details, see the Microsoft support page.
Before waking up the managed devices, the following requirements must be fulfilled:
Ensure that the network card on the managed device supports WOL.
Ensure that you have enabled the WOL option in the BIOS setup of the managed device.
Ensure that the managed device is registered with the ZENworks Management Zone.
Ensure that the Network Interface Card is configured in Device Manager to allow it to wake up the device. For more information, read Configuring power management using the user interface.
Ensure that the power adapter is connected to the device.
Ensure that the remote node is in a soft-power off state. In the soft-power off state, the CPU is powered off and a minimal amount of power is utilized by its network interface card. Unlike the hard-off state, in the soft-off state the power connection to the machine remains switched on when the machine is shut down.
If your device supports WOL, you can remotely wake up a managed device by:
Configuring WOL through quick task
Configuring WOL through bundle distribution schedule
For information on steps for Assigning Existing Bundles to Devices, see Assigning Existing Bundles to Devices
in ZENworks Software Distribution Reference.
To use the WOL option through quick task:
In ZENworks Control Center, click Devices.
Click Servers or Workstations to display the list of managed devices.
Select the device to wake up.
Click Quick Tasks > Wake Up to display the Wake Up dialog box.
Select one of the WOL options for the servers to send a wakeup request to the managed devices. For more information, see
NOTE:Any ZENworks 11.2.4 Windows and Linux managed device can act as a proxy. For 11.2.3 and earlier, only Windows agents can act as a proxy.
Select one of the following options to specify the servers to send a wake-up request to the managed devices:
Automatically detect the server: ZENworks automatically detects the Primary Server closest to the managed device. If the server and the remote device are in different subnets, ensure that the router connecting them is configured to forward subnet-oriented broadcasts on UDP port 1761.
Use the following devices: Click Add to select a proxy device that exists in the same subnet as the device you want to wake up. If the router is configured to forward subnet-oriented broadcasts on UDP port 1761, a proxy is not required.
Select one of the following options to specify the IP address to send the wake-up broadcast:
Automatically detect the IP address: ZENworks automatically detects the default broadcast address of the subnet to send the wakeup broadcast to the managed device.
Use the following IP address: Specify the IP address to send the wakeup broadcast to the managed device, then click Add.
In the Number of Retries option, specify the number of attempts to wake up the device. By default, it is 1.
In the Time Interval between Retries option, specify the time period between two retry attempts. By default, it is 2 minutes.
Click OK.
NOTE:The default values for the Number of Retries and the Time Interval between Retries options are configured at the zone level. You can override these values at the device level.