IP directed broadcast is a packet sent to the broadcast address of a subnet but from a sender which is not directly connected. IP directed broadcasts, if enabled on the network equipment, can make your network vulnerable to DOS attacks. Only a Layer 2 broadcast (and unknown unicast) will be sent out all ports on a switch. That switch will not know to which port is the PC connected while that PC is asleep. Only way to get some packets to that PC without an ARP resolution is by using local subnet L2 broadcast.įurthermore, we can surely assume that your PCs are connected to L2 Access Switch. You need directed broadcast because PC which needs to be woken up is asleep and while asleep it will not have an IP nor it will respond to ARP. In our example below, both ip helper and directed broadcast are configured on the same 元 device since this is the only router connecting two subnets.ĭirected broadcast on Cisco devices is off by default since IOS 12.0 and needs to be configured on specific subnets where WoL will be needed. The first router on the path, router with server subnet locally connected, should have ip helper configured pointing to directed broadcast IP address (in our case 172.19.1.255). If you send magic packets across network segments (between VLANs or from some remote subnet), last router in the path, one having client subnet locally connected, needs to be configured with directed broadcast. You would usually have a WoL server somewhere on you network which will be used to source magic packets. Magic packet is specially crafted network directed broadcast packet typically sent with connectionless UDP, port 7. NIC then keeps listening on the network for the magic packet and if received it will initialise the system boot process and power up the PC. NIC which supports WoL is still receiving power when PC is turned off. WoL is sending “magic packets” to computer NIC card in order to start the system up. NIC cards on machines need to support WoL for this to work, but we don’t bother with this here. Of course, network devices need to be configured to enable that kind of “magic” packet forwarding. If a computer on local LAN network is turned off and administrator needs to do some regular maintenance on it, he will need to use Wake-On-LAN (WoL) to power the system up remotely.
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