Paul wrote:
> In article <2MzQe.113756$(E-Mail Removed)>, Malebolge
> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
>
>>Where is found the connector where to connect the cable of card 10/100
>>in order to make to work the wol?
>>
>>
>>Sorry for my bad english.
>>
>>
>>Thx Francesco
>
>
> There are two standards for the WOL.
>
> The old way, uses a connector on the network card, and a
> connector on the motherboard. A cable is connected between
> the two, in order for WOL to work.
>
> The new way, as of PCI specification 2.2, requires no cable.
> If you buy a PCI 2.2 network card, a signal has been added
> to the PCI connector and the signal is called PME. PME
> stands for "Power Management Event".
>
> The PME signal is wired to all the PCI slots.
> If you have five networks cards plugged into
> the PCI slots, any one of the network cards can
> assert the PME signal to the Southbridge.
> And then any of the network cards can wake the computer.
>
> +-----------> PME signal to Southbridge
> |
> PCI1
> |
> PCI2
> |
> PCI3
> |
> PCI4 <--- Plug in a PCI 2.2 version of network card
> | in any slot. In the BIOS, you set
> PCI5 "Power Up On PCI card" [Enabled] to make
> the WOL work. Now, send the magic packet
> to the network card. The PME signal takes
> the place of the old WOL cable.
>
> Note: The existence of "Power Up On PCI card" in the BIOS
> proves the A7V333 supports PCI standard 2.2 and the new PME
> signal.
>
> Hope that helps,
> Paul
Paul
You are Asus man. I got to ask, what do you do for a living?
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