06-06-2011 06:16 AM - edited 03-03-2019 06:17 AM
When setting up WOL across a Layer 3 boundary you have to enter an ' ip helper ' address on the WOL server L3 vlan for each subnet you want to ' wake '.
What if you have 200+ subnets , I'm fairly sure the practical limit for ' ip helper ' addresses is 16 ?
06-07-2011 06:30 AM
Maybe the WOL server should be configured to send to the direct broadcast address of each remote subnet ?
Or you expect the router to perform packet replication at no configuration and processing cost ?
06-14-2011 03:33 PM
I wonder where the original poster got the idea that the practical limit for ip helper-address was 16? I agree that there is some additional overhead on the router for each helper-address that you add to the configuration. But a router should be able to process a lot more than 16 helper-addresses.
200+ would be a lot of helper-addresses and depending on what kind of router (how much CPU does it have) and what other features are configured doing 200+ might be a stretch. But most routers should be able to do lots more than 16.
HTH
Rick
06-15-2011 12:08 AM
Quote from a previous TAC case ;
DHCP processes first 16 'ip helper-address' entries as per the order of configuration
06-15-2011 03:19 AM
I tend to agree with Richard. I guess some practical testing would be needed.
09-26-2011 11:31 AM
I just tested this in my environment and if the WOL server sends out a directed broadcast there is no need for the helper addresses on the Wake On LAN server environment. The only thing you need to do is enable ip directed-broadcast
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