EMCO WakeOnLan Professional: Complete Feature Overview

How to Use EMCO WakeOnLan Professional: Step-by-Step GuideEMCO WakeOnLan Professional is a Windows tool that lets you remotely power on, wake up, and shut down computers over a local network or the Internet. This guide walks through installation, configuration, discovery of machines, sending Wake-on-LAN (WOL) packets, scheduling, remote shutdown, troubleshooting, and best practices so you can manage power for multiple PCs effectively.


What you’ll need before starting

  • A Windows machine to run EMCO WakeOnLan Professional (Windows 7 and later; check current compatibility if using server editions).
  • Target computers with Wake-on-LAN support enabled in BIOS/UEFI and their network adapters configured accordingly.
  • Administrative credentials for target machines if you plan to use remote shutdown or advanced management.
  • Proper network configuration (router/switch allowing UDP magic packets and, if over the Internet, port forwarding or VPN).

1. Install EMCO WakeOnLan Professional

  1. Download the installer from EMCO Software’s official website.
  2. Run the installer and follow prompts. Choose the installation folder and accept license terms.
  3. Launch the application after installation completes. If you have a license key, enter it to activate the Professional features; otherwise you can first explore the trial mode.

2. Configure application settings

  • Open the Settings/Options panel.
  • Set a default timeout and retries for network operations.
  • Configure the network interfaces EMCO should use if the host has multiple NICs.
  • Adjust discovery parameters (IP ranges, timeouts) to suit your network size.
  • If you plan to wake machines over the Internet, configure the external broadcast address or the gateway IP and the UDP port (default 9 or 7). Ensure your router forwards that port to your internal network if needed.

3. Enable Wake-on-LAN on target machines

  1. BIOS/UEFI: Enter each target PC’s BIOS/UEFI and enable Wake-on-LAN (may appear as “Wake on PCI/PCIe,” “Power on by LAN,” or similar).
  2. Network adapter (Windows):
    • Open Device Manager > Network adapters > Properties of the NIC > Power Management.
    • Check Allow this device to wake the computer and Only allow a magic packet to wake the computer (optional but recommended).
    • Under the Advanced tab, enable settings like Wake on Magic Packet, Wake From Shutdown, or vendor-specific options.
  3. Ensure the OS shutdown state still supports WOL (S3/S4/S5 behavior depends on motherboard and NIC).

4. Add computers to EMCO WakeOnLan Professional

  • Manual entry:
    • Click Add > New Computer.
    • Enter the computer name or description, MAC address (required for WOL), IP address or hostname, and optionally the subnet and group.
    • Save the entry.
  • Discovery:
    • Use the Discover or Scan feature. Input an IP range or network segment.
    • EMCO will scan and populate discovered hosts with available info (name, IP, MAC).
    • Review discovered entries and add them to your list.
  • Import:
    • Import from CSV or AD (if supported in your edition). Provide a CSV with columns such as name, IP, MAC, and group.

5. Organize your inventory

  • Create groups (by office, floor, department) and drag computers into groups for easier management.
  • Use tags or descriptions to add location, owner, or purpose.
  • Save views and filters for quick access to commonly managed sets.

6. Wake computers (send magic packets)

  • Select one or multiple computers in the list or a group.
  • Click Wake (or Send Magic Packet). EMCO will build and send a magic packet to each selected machine’s MAC address using the configured broadcast method.
  • Monitor the status column — EMCO will show whether the host responded or stayed offline.
  • If waking over subnet boundaries, ensure correct broadcast or gateway settings and that intermediate routers allow directed broadcasts (often disabled by default).

7. Remote shutdown, restart, and other actions

  • To shut down or restart remote machines, select them and choose Remote Shutdown or Restart.
  • Provide administrative credentials when prompted. You can save credentials in the application for repeated use (consider security policies before storing credentials).
  • You can also send custom commands, run scripts, or trigger remote actions (depending on Professional edition features and permissions).

8. Schedule wake and shutdown tasks

  • Open the Scheduler or Tasks section.
  • Create a new task: choose action (Wake, Shutdown, Restart), target machines or group, recurrence (one-time, daily, weekly), and time.
  • Configure pre- and post-conditions (e.g., only run if the host is offline for Wake tasks).
  • Test scheduled tasks with a shorter schedule to confirm behavior.

9. Using Wake-on-LAN across the Internet

  • Prefer VPN for security and reliability: connect remotely to the LAN via VPN, then use EMCO as if local.
  • If VPN isn’t available:
    • Configure your router to forward the chosen UDP port (commonly 9 or 7) to the broadcast address or a dedicated internal IP. Many routers block directed broadcasts; alternative is to forward to a WOL helper device.
    • In EMCO, set the external gateway or broadcast IP and port. Use the public IP of the network when awake from the Internet.
  • Be aware of security risks when exposing WOL ports; restrict access where possible and use strong router rules.

10. Troubleshooting common problems

  • Computer doesn’t wake:
    • Verify MAC address is correct.
    • Check BIOS/UEFI WOL setting and NIC power settings in Device Manager.
    • Ensure the machine’s power state supports WOL (some systems disable WOL in full shutdown).
    • Confirm correct broadcast address and that routers/switches permit the magic packet.
  • Discovery fails:
    • Ensure firewall rules allow EMCO’s scanning traffic (UDP/TCP as required).
    • Try scanning a smaller IP range to isolate network issues.
  • Remote shutdown fails:
    • Confirm administrative credentials and that Windows Remote Service (Remote Registry, RPC) are available.
    • Check target firewall settings for remote management.

11. Security and best practices

  • Use VPN rather than exposing WOL ports when possible.
  • Restrict who can access EMCO and store credentials securely.
  • Keep EMCO and network drivers/firmware updated.
  • Test WOL settings during maintenance windows to avoid accidental disruptions.
  • Document MAC addresses and WOL-related BIOS/NIC settings for each machine.

12. Advanced tips

  • Use grouping and tags to perform bulk operations safely (e.g., wake only a specific floor).
  • Combine scheduled WOL with maintenance scripts to run updates during off-hours.
  • Monitor logs to verify scheduled tasks and manual operations; export logs for audits.
  • If WOL over Wi‑Fi is needed, check vendor-specific support — many wireless NICs and AP setups do not support WOL from a powered-off state.

Troubleshooting checklist (quick):

  • Confirm MAC, BIOS, NIC WOL settings.
  • Check broadcast/gateway settings and router forwarding if across subnets.
  • Verify firewalls and services for discovery and remote shutdown.
  • Use VPN for cross-network operations whenever possible.

If you want, I can:

  • Create a short checklist you can print and take to each machine for setup.
  • Write step-by-step BIOS/NIC setting instructions for a specific motherboard or NIC model. Which would you prefer?

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *