Wake on LAN over different VLANS
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@Tom-Elliott I completely understand and fully appreciate all your help. I just updated the trunk and got the wolbroadcast plugin installed. Is there anything else I need to do or technically now it should work?
@Joseph-Hales The Fog server is probably more authenticated than my computer is as it no longer needs to authenticate to out iPrism and my computer still does every so often. -
@szecca1 You need to instlal and activate the plugin of course. The last step is add in all your broadcast addresses with names (for simplicity all around)
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@Tom-Elliott Ok so I installed and activated the plugin and when I click on it i am getting this:
You’re saying all I have to do now is name the broadcast whatever i want and then give the broadcast IP of what VLAN it is?
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@szecca1 yes
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@Tom-Elliott Ok awesome I will give that a try tomorrow and let you guys know how that works. I appreciate all the help.
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That’s a pretty awesome plugin… for real…
I’m going to use that when I setup FOG in vmware at our central site.
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@Tom-Elliott I apologize in advance but where would I get this broadcast ip? Would this be the gateway ip from each building? I’m not sure where to pull this broadcast IP from?
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You basically jot down any valid IP for a network, then jot down your subnet mask.
Convert both to binary, with each of the four octets separated by a decimal as normal.
Then, for each ‘0’ in the subnet mask, you’d flip that to a 1, but you’d still use the network portion of the valid IP, those binary bits would just “fall through”
So… example time…
Subnet mask: 255.255.240.0
IP 10.2.3.8
Binary IP Subnet:
00001010.00000010.00000011.00001000
11111111.11111111.11110000.00000000(Client IP network portion: 00001010.00000010.0000 Client portion: 0011.00001000)
the fall through numbers for the network address:
00001010.00000010.0000000.00000000 (Where 1 is set in the subnet mask, binary from the client ‘fall through’ to form a network address)
This gives us a network address of 10.2.0.0The broadcast address is the network address combined with all-on client bits.
00001010.00000010.00001111.11111111
(binary in the subnet mask set to ‘0’ ‘fall through’ to the broadcast address as ‘1’)Convert to decimal: 10.2.15.255
So, 10.2.15.255 would be the broadcast address for that IP and that subnet mask.
And, that’s correct, that’s my particular building’s broadcast address.
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@Wayne-Workman The 10.2.3.8 address that you used in your example, where did you get that from? Is that just a random IP of a client in the 10.2 VLAN or is that something in particular?
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@szecca1 It’s a random (but valid) IP for my network.
Also, don’t think of it as a V-LAN… that’s not correct. Think of a “network” as a broadcast domain, or a subnet.
V-LANs came along WAY after the specs for TCP/IP and routing were developed. V-LANS are just a way to logically separate traffic within the same device.
V-Lans have just numbers assigned… I.E. 5, 6, 7, 8, 55, 56, and so on.
Networks have a network address, and a broadcast address and a valid range (hence ‘broadcast domain’). If you have subnetted networks, then I SUPPOSE its ok to call them subnets… but I won’t call them that lol.
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@Wayne-Workman Ok I am stuck using your example so I pulled a random IP from my high school.
Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0
IP: 10.2.1.64Binary IP Subnet:
00001010.00000010.00000001.01000000
11111111.11111111.00000000.00000000(Client IP network portion: 00001010.00000010.0000 Client portion: 0001.01000000)
Which the fall through for the network address if I am correct would be:
00001010.00000010.00000000.00000000
which give a network address of 10.2.0.0After that I am not sure where to go as I get confused by what you did.
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@szecca1 said:
@Wayne-Workman Ok I am stuck using your example so I pulled a random IP from my high school.
Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0
IP: 10.2.1.64Binary IP Subnet:
00001010.00000010.00000001.01000000
11111111.11111111.00000000.00000000(Client IP network portion: 00001010.00000010.0000 Client portion: 0001.01000000)
Which the fall through for the network address if I am correct would be:
00001010.00000010.00000000.00000000
which give a network address of 10.2.0.0After that I am not sure where to go as I get confused by what you did.
IP: 00001010.00000010.00000001.01000000
Subnet: 11111111.11111111.00000000.00000000
(only where there is a 1 for subnet, the IP address portion falls through)
Fall through: 00001010.00000010.00000000.00000000 <-- your network addressTo get the broadcast, turn on all the client portion ‘bits’ where the subnet mask is 0.
00001010.00000010.11111111.11111111 <-- your broadcast address 10.2.255.255
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@Wayne-Workman And that broadcast address should allow me to run the wake on lan to the high school which is where that IP came from?
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@szecca1 said:
@Wayne-Workman And that broadcast address should allow me to run the wake on lan to the high school which is where that IP came from?
It should. Test it and report back? I am not using the plugin yet so I don’t know, but if Tom says that’s how it is, then 99.9% of the time, that’s how it is.
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This is what I entered into that plugin creating it for my high school and just tested it and didnt work.
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You likely need to allow udp-broadcast-forwarding on your switches. At the very least, it needs to be enabled for the routing switch. The way to do this varies depending on the switch. HP Procurve allows for
udp-broadcast-forwarding on
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@Tom-Elliott We already did that thinking it was a switch problem before doing this plug in
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@szecca1 are you 100% sure that 10.2.255.255 is that networks broadcast address?
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@Tom-Elliott I worked with @Wayne-Workman and he helped me figure that out by converting an IP address into that. Previous posts go through it and thats what we came to the conclusion it is.
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What is the subnet mask of your network? Class A, B, C?