Veriton 6000Pro WOL and sleep/standby

lshannon1941
lshannon1941 Member Posts: 3 New User

I have a Veriton 6900 Pro that is powerful enough to use as a RAID server. It has to have Wake-On-Lan (WOL) capability. The on-board NIC has all the right options, but to test it I have to put the computer to sleep (standby).

 

OS - Win XP Pro SP3, current as of the end-of-life date, fresh install. Bios latest version (A04).

 

When I try to sleep the computer, the only options I get are Turn Off and Restart. Standby is greyed out. Never ran into this before.

 

Questions: Does the machine support WOL with 'magic packets'? Is there something I'm missing in the setup to enable the machine to go into standby? Does that Intel bios extension (or whatever it is) have anything to do with this? If so, how do I use it and what should I be looking for?

 

Thanks all.

Answers

  • lshannon1941
    lshannon1941 Member Posts: 3 New User

    Well, I got into the Management Engine (was still the default password) and played around a bit, but nothing seemed to be pertinent or helpful.

     

    The explanations for this stuff is as obscure as you can get.

     

    Anyhow - still looking for a simpe solution to my simple problem.

  • lshannon1941
    lshannon1941 Member Posts: 3 New User

    Did a fresh install of XP, just to see if something had been added by somebody somewhere along the line.

     

    Still has Standby greyed out.

     

    A little more digging revealed that powercfg.exe might tell me something. It did. The system does not support S1, S2, S3, or Hibernate. Nothin' !! You're either on or off. Same thing when disabling the Management Engine.

     

    Who the heck designs a system where you can't either standby or hibernate? Maybe the latest bios (R03-A04) has a glitch in it or something?

     

    So ... bottom line: The system works fine as long as you just turn it on when you want to use it and turn it off when you're done, but as a server (which has to be available 24/7 but only used when needed) it's just an expensive (and inefficient) room heater.