![wol teamviewer 10 wol teamviewer 10](http://docplayer.net/docs-images/46/21780293/images/page_1.jpg)
You will have to issue this command via SSH (or type in terminal) each time you want to wake up the PC. This method requires sudo, but allows you to specify the interface, which is what we need.
#Wol teamviewer 10 Pc
The command to wake your PC up is: sudo etherwake -i eth0 AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF (click on the details of that connection to reveal the IP and MAC listed as AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF in the example ). Once this is installed, you have to go to the PC and note the MAC address of the LAN adapter the RPI is connected to.
#Wol teamviewer 10 install
The best way to do this is to use the etherwake: sudo apt-get install etherwake This is important because we have to force the Magic Packet to go through the eth0 instead of WIFI. If you configured the RPI in the same way as in the Guide 2 (see step 2) your microcomputer will have a link via LAN with the computer but will use the WIFI to connect to the internet. Feel free to connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+ Love the sound of this setup? Follow the for more. a PC which has a LAN port with Wake On Lan support (most of them).a Raspberry Pi with the ethernet port and WIFI connectivity.When the Magic Packet is received by the PC via LAN cable, it wakes up. The RPI is constantly awake and is able to receive a request to wake the PC through the LAN interface. If your PC is connected to the internet via WIFI, and the card does not support Wake on LAN, you have no other options of waking up the PC remotely. Running a LAN cable may not always be a feasible solution.
![wol teamviewer 10 wol teamviewer 10](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/iPjMtHrzXzA/maxresdefault.jpg)
You can wake up the PC within seconds when needed, saving a lot of power in the process.
![wol teamviewer 10 wol teamviewer 10](https://news-cdn.softpedia.com/images/news2/TeamViewer-Review-466335-9.jpg)
This means you no longer have to keep your PC on, to access the files remotely. It can be done on the local network as well as from the internet. You can wake up any PC linked to the Raspberry Pi remotely. The Raspbian image has changed, and the old version is no longer valid. I had it set to any, but switched it to "exclusive" for testing this.First of all, this is an updated revision of my previous tutorial. i am not waking the ASUS PC via it's public address, but via LAN (in case there is an idea about the public address working but no the LAN method). I plan to go the Teamviewer route in search of an answer as well, but thought I'd check here too *Smile So, I am wondering what method Teamviewer uses (some "Black Magic Packet" ? LOL), and if anyone here might have a clue what the difference is. So, LAN is powered on (and of course not even TViewer would be able to overcome that!) (I did not check that the light in early attempts a few months back). I notice that the LAN light is staying on, so I now suspect a windows networking access failure. I noticed a WOL feature in Teamviewer, so I enabled that and Teamviewer will wake that ASUS rig from another computer when i click the "wake" button in Teamviewer.
#Wol teamviewer 10 drivers
So, I blamed the Realtek / ASUS, and myself for not figuring the settings, but I tried changing every BIOS setting on this Asus H270 rig, including using different drivers and nothing would work. (I even had an old XP that i would access the same way hooked in here). I am not set up as a "Home Group"(it is set as Workplace), but WOL always works on the 3 other computers (2 Win 10 & one old Win7) simply by typing in the network name or using shortcuts I made in my start menu. I was unable to get WOL working (Asus H270-Plus with Realtek RTL8168H LAN).