I can't turn on my home PC remotely, but the system seems configured correctly to be turned on by Wake On Lan












0














I'm trying to enable Wake On Lan to turn on my home PC remotely.
I set a static IP for my PC (by router settings) and port mapping. I put the my PC's IP into DMZ, too.
Furthermore I disabled the power saving mode and enabled WoL packets by NIC driver settings and Windows Control Panel.
Then I used a ddns service to send a WoL packet and I verified by "Wake-on-LAN Packet sniffer" program that the PC would receive these packets correctly.
I disabled ErP by bios settings at the PC startup.
The test was ok, but when my PC is powered off, I can't turn on my PC by public IP (using the url provided from ddns service) and I can turn on it by private IP (by device connected to same home network, obviously) the first one/two times after that I can never turn it on remotely.

What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question






















  • WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
    – shawn
    Dec 23 '18 at 3:04
















0














I'm trying to enable Wake On Lan to turn on my home PC remotely.
I set a static IP for my PC (by router settings) and port mapping. I put the my PC's IP into DMZ, too.
Furthermore I disabled the power saving mode and enabled WoL packets by NIC driver settings and Windows Control Panel.
Then I used a ddns service to send a WoL packet and I verified by "Wake-on-LAN Packet sniffer" program that the PC would receive these packets correctly.
I disabled ErP by bios settings at the PC startup.
The test was ok, but when my PC is powered off, I can't turn on my PC by public IP (using the url provided from ddns service) and I can turn on it by private IP (by device connected to same home network, obviously) the first one/two times after that I can never turn it on remotely.

What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question






















  • WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
    – shawn
    Dec 23 '18 at 3:04














0












0








0


1





I'm trying to enable Wake On Lan to turn on my home PC remotely.
I set a static IP for my PC (by router settings) and port mapping. I put the my PC's IP into DMZ, too.
Furthermore I disabled the power saving mode and enabled WoL packets by NIC driver settings and Windows Control Panel.
Then I used a ddns service to send a WoL packet and I verified by "Wake-on-LAN Packet sniffer" program that the PC would receive these packets correctly.
I disabled ErP by bios settings at the PC startup.
The test was ok, but when my PC is powered off, I can't turn on my PC by public IP (using the url provided from ddns service) and I can turn on it by private IP (by device connected to same home network, obviously) the first one/two times after that I can never turn it on remotely.

What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question













I'm trying to enable Wake On Lan to turn on my home PC remotely.
I set a static IP for my PC (by router settings) and port mapping. I put the my PC's IP into DMZ, too.
Furthermore I disabled the power saving mode and enabled WoL packets by NIC driver settings and Windows Control Panel.
Then I used a ddns service to send a WoL packet and I verified by "Wake-on-LAN Packet sniffer" program that the PC would receive these packets correctly.
I disabled ErP by bios settings at the PC startup.
The test was ok, but when my PC is powered off, I can't turn on my PC by public IP (using the url provided from ddns service) and I can turn on it by private IP (by device connected to same home network, obviously) the first one/two times after that I can never turn it on remotely.

What am I doing wrong?







networking windows-10 wake-on-lan






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 21 '18 at 20:49









Radioga

1




1












  • WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
    – shawn
    Dec 23 '18 at 3:04


















  • WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
    – shawn
    Dec 23 '18 at 3:04
















WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
– shawn
Dec 23 '18 at 3:04




WOL usually uses UDP. Is your router configured to forward UDP as well as TCP?
– shawn
Dec 23 '18 at 3:04










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