I have an HAOS-VM running on a machine attached to my router via cable, and another (wifi attached) machine that I want to WoL from HA.

Apparently, my router does not forward WoL packets from wired ethernet to wifi, so I just plugged in a usb-wifi dongle and connected HAOS via the dongle - wifi works, no problem.

WoL in general also works, I can wake the machine up from my MacBook without a problem. I can also use the very same dongle on a Debian desktop to send WoL packets.

However, doing it from HA fails. My configuration.yaml looks like this:

wake_on_lan:
switch:
  - platform: wake_on_lan
    name: wake_<machine>
    mac: <mac>

I tried deactivating the KVM brigde, so that the VM really only connects via wifi, but no changes here either.

There are no errors in any logs, so it doesn’t look like it’s failing per se.

To me it looks almost like the packet is send to nirvana, but there’s no way to configure the network interface in the WoL platform either.

Update

I kind of got everything to work, albeit in a rather weird way.

There already is a built-in WoL Service, accessible via the GUI, however, I have to use the Advanced Mode to access it, otherwise it simply doesn’t show up. Using that service and the proper broadcast address, I’m now able to wake the target machine via a button. What’s a bit concerning to me is that the “advanced mode” toggle seems to be lost after a reboot. I get a warning, that the WoL service couldn’t be found, that only resolves after setting the advanced mode off and on again - that’s rather stupid.

  • @grue
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    610 months ago

    Huh, I’m surprised that the idea of wake-on-wifi makes conceptual sense to begin with. I mean, with a wired LAN the network card can listen for the magic WoL packet while otherwise being in a very low-power state, but with wifi I’d expect that the thing would have to be fully “on” because of all the transmission overhead needed to maintain the connection. Wired wake-on-lan is a purely OSI layer 2 thing (the card just listens for its own MAC address), but how would wake-on-wifi even know which SSID it’s supposed to be listening to without the OS running?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      210 months ago

      Wake-on-LAN is certainly a thing for WiFi, the problem here might be that the USB bus gets shut off when the device is sleeping, thus disconnecting the WiFi.