25-04-2009, 23:35
Sigo creyendo que el problema bien por aqui:
Finally, you need to configure your router to allow the incoming magic packet to be broadcast on your LAN. This is the most difficult stage because many consumer routers simply do not allow this. As there are so many makes and models of router available I cannot give specifics for any particular model, but the general steps you should try are as follows (you only need one of these to work):
Setup a port-forwarding rule to forward all incoming UDP packets on your chosen port to the broadcast address of your LAN. For example, if your target host has an IP address of 192.168.0.10 and your LAN's subnet mask is 255.255.255.0, then your LAN's broadcast address is 192.168.0.255.
If your router will not allow you to port-forward to the LAN's broadcast address (as many won't), then setup a port-forwarding rule to forward all incoming UDP packets on your chosen port to the IP address of your target host instead. This alone is not enough as your target host doesn't actually have an IP address while it is sleeping, so you need to setup a static ARP mapping in the router between the target host's MAC address and its IP address. See your router's documentation for details.
En el router tiene en seguridad IP Filtering y yo creo que por hay va el tema en incoming magic packet que se pueden configurar en el router
En mi router encuentro esto pero lo datos a entrar me vuelvo ya loco
     Source Ip address.             ...................
     Source Subnet Mask:           ...................
     Source Port (port or port:port):    ................
     Destination IP address:          .................
     Destination Subnet Mask:        .................
     Destination Port (port or port:port): ................
Finally, you need to configure your router to allow the incoming magic packet to be broadcast on your LAN. This is the most difficult stage because many consumer routers simply do not allow this. As there are so many makes and models of router available I cannot give specifics for any particular model, but the general steps you should try are as follows (you only need one of these to work):
Setup a port-forwarding rule to forward all incoming UDP packets on your chosen port to the broadcast address of your LAN. For example, if your target host has an IP address of 192.168.0.10 and your LAN's subnet mask is 255.255.255.0, then your LAN's broadcast address is 192.168.0.255.
If your router will not allow you to port-forward to the LAN's broadcast address (as many won't), then setup a port-forwarding rule to forward all incoming UDP packets on your chosen port to the IP address of your target host instead. This alone is not enough as your target host doesn't actually have an IP address while it is sleeping, so you need to setup a static ARP mapping in the router between the target host's MAC address and its IP address. See your router's documentation for details.
En el router tiene en seguridad IP Filtering y yo creo que por hay va el tema en incoming magic packet que se pueden configurar en el router
En mi router encuentro esto pero lo datos a entrar me vuelvo ya loco
     Source Ip address.             ...................
     Source Subnet Mask:           ...................
     Source Port (port or port:port):    ................
     Destination IP address:          .................
     Destination Subnet Mask:        .................
     Destination Port (port or port:port): ................
Saludos