

The device can only be woken up if at least one of the devices in the list is online. Using this option, AnyDesk will automatically ping random AnyDesk clients on the same direct local area network as the device to be woken up and request them to send a wake-up packet to the target device.Įnabled, but wake your device using the following desks onlyĪnyDesk ID(s) from devices in the local network can be set up here. AnyDesk Wake-on-Lan settings DisabledĪctivated by default. The operating system settings need to be set up properly and lastly, Wake-on-Lan has to be enabled in the motherboards BIOS/UEFI settings. Wake-On-LAN has to be enabled in the remote AnyDesk client's settings, Hybrid shutdown (Default for Win 8, 8.1, 10).Shutdown (S5 Power State, default for Windows 7).Please see How to set up Wake-on-LAN for a detailed description of the available settings.ĪnyDesk wakes devices that are in the following modes: Once the device has woken up, AnyDesk will automatically connect to it. If you send a "Power on" request from L to R, our AnyDesk servers will look for online clients in network B such as W and request that it sends a wake-up packet from the device hosting W to the device hosting R. The powered-off or asleep remote client R on network B.Īn awake and online remote client W on network B. If everything has been set up accordingly, pressing “Power on” will start the wake-up process of the sleeping device assuming there is an online AnyDesk client on the same network as the device you are trying to wake up.įor example, in the situation with the following: When connecting to an offline client, AnyDesk will show a prompt to “Power on” the sleeping device.


Administrator Privileges and Elevation (UAC)ĪnyDesk for Linux / Raspberry Pi / FreeBSDĬaution: Please contact your hardware manufacturer to see if your hardware supports Wake-On-LAN.
