In shutdown mode, computers that have remote Wake up or Wake on LAN options on the BIOS's power Management menu will not support remotely powering up, and if you do not have this option, do not support remote boot (if remote Wake up does not support remotely booting, please consult your hardware provider.) )
How to enter the BIOS:
When the computer starts, enter the BIOS setup by repeatedly pressing the "DELETE" key or the "F2" key.
Usually under "Power managment", "Wake on LAN", "WOL", "Boot on LAN", "PME Event WakeUp", "Power on through PCI card", "Power on by" PC I Devices "," wake-up by PCI card "," Wake up in PCI PME "," WakeUp by pme# of PCI "," WakeUp by Onborad LAN "," Resume by MAC L An ', "Resume by PCI or PCI-E ddevice", "Wake-up from PCI Settings", "Wake-up by PCIe device" or something like that and can enable it.
Visually graphical Uefi BIOS, refer to the following ways:
Advanced Advanced Power Management (APM) > awakened by PCI settings
Awakened by PCIe devices
Resume by PCI or pci-e Ddevice
Note: If there is a low power mode or a EuP 2013 set item for disabled (off)
Legend:
For example, the desktop is Dell755:
Press del or F2 into the BIOS menu at power-on, select Power Management Setup and set remote Wake up to ON.
If you have the low power mode option, be sure to set off.
Take the Dell Latitude D630 as an example:
Sunflower boot stick also supports remote-enabled servers, setting Dell1950 as an example:
Press Ctrl+s on startup, enter the NIC Setup menu, and set the Pre-Boot Wake on LAN as enable.
Note: If you are unable to confirm that the BIOS contains parameters that can be set, use the Remote Boot Detection Tool (HTTP://PAN.BAIDU.COM/S/1DDPGDMH) to test whether you can boot remotely on the intranet or directly contact the motherboard manufacturer to confirm that your device supports remote wake-up!