Neither using the WOL tool nor from the ESPEasy device. Using the tools you've linked I don't get any WOL Magic packet through one of my routers. I had to return as fast as possible to the location where I didn't have any WOL capable device but I carried a Laptop with me, Lenovo X201, and additionally an old Fritz Box 7272. The optimal (most responsive) solution would involve a loop which re-sends http until an acknowledge is received. (If I repeat the request to start the radio I get a momentary silence on re-start). I don't think Easy ESP does this - but I've only been playing with it for a few weeks. Since it cannot be known if the server is already awake, it would be useful to have sendToHttp with acknowledge and a configurable timeout. It is necessary to insert a delay between WOL and http request in order for the server to actually wake. WOL is completely reliable so far! Google voice command recognition, less so. Events on the ESP are triggered by Webhooks from IFTTT which are initiated by yelling at the Google assistant. The music server spends most of its time in standby - hence the need for WOL. I've got a D1 Mini that is controlling my kitchen TV by IR and will also turn on my Squeezebox (LMS) music server and put the radio on by local http request. My project is a Google Nest interface - voice control. I don't believe USB connected network adapters are capable of WOL Check the adapter's manual.ĮSP_Easy_mega_20201016_test_ESP8266_4M1M_VCC.zip Wake-On-Lan Beta Test bin (648.75 KiB) Downloaded 328 times PC's with integrated WiFi and Ethernet ports will likely have two MAC addresses, with specific WOL settings for each one. WOL log messages are prefixed "WAKE ON LAN:". Set Serial log level to info (Tools->Advanced-> Log Settings). The WOL plugin provides Serial Log messages for troubleshooting. I suggest using the nirsoft util to confirm the PC's WOL works before trying the ESPEasy plugin. The nirsoft wake_on_lan utility is handy for sending WOL packets to test a sleeping PC: Use the task name as the command keyword.ħ. You can have several instances of the plugin. However, you can supply the values with the command, which will replace the defaults. If you send the command keyword without arguments then all the plugin's default settings are used. The Command Keyword can be WAKEONLAN or the Task's Name. Common UDP Port values are 0, 7, and 9.ģ. Some WOL devices will accept magic packets sent to their specific IP too. If the router does not accept this then use the local subnet IP address with 255 at the end. The standard Magic Packet IP address is 255.255.255.255. The default value(s) will appear after clicking the Submit button.Ģ. When you first add the WOL task device, blank fields will be automatically populated with default values if you leave them empty. The plugin's name is: Communication - Wake On LAN ġ. BTW, Nextion is included in _test_ releases.
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