circadian
wolweb
circadian | wolweb | |
---|---|---|
3 | 8 | |
238 | 265 | |
- | - | |
5.1 | 8.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
circadian
- Circadian – Suspend-on-Idle Daemon for GNU/Linux Power Management
-
Saving Energy: Home Server That Automatically Suspends to RAM and Wakes Up Again
I wrote something remarkably similar a few years ago, for similar reasons. I was pretty baffled that nothing similar already existed. Auto-wake with the RTC timer was what I really wanted.
Link, in case you care: https://github.com/mrmekon/circadian
I have a "NAS", which is really an enormous desktop tower crammed full of hard drives. It auto-wakes once per day, pulls backups from my various servers all over the place, then returns to sleep.
wolweb
-
WOL command from within a Docker image
Rather than start tweaking existing containers (esp as they may get reloaded / messed up by a DSM update) I would look at a dedicated WOL container that you can afford to have impacted something like https://github.com/sameerdhoot/wolweb
-
Wake on Lan
A few days this was mentioned, I haven't used it yet, but seems easy enough.
-
Wake on wan work from Home(with phone in cellular mode) but when I step outside it doesn't work anymore (with in cellular mode still).
If you can't get it working it's easy enough to set up some sort of cheapo sbc computer that can stay on all the time that you can ssh into to issue the wol command or run something like this: https://github.com/sameerdhoot/wolweb
- wolweb Tool with Docker
-
Circadian – Suspend-on-Idle Daemon for GNU/Linux Power Management
yes, homeservers do not need to run at all times. I solve this by being able to ssh into the router from WAN via wireguard and sending out wake-on-LAN magic packets.
There are also webuis that can do this for you https://github.com/sameerdhoot/wolweb
-
How can I wake on wan my home pc?
Alternative, better ways, to accomplish this would be with another low-power device via triggering a command via port knocking, sshing and running a wake-up command, or setting up a web gui for sending wol packets
-
Quick and easy Wake-On-LAN (WOL) on Linux
Personally I use https://github.com/sameerdhoot/wolweb for work, "easy enough" to use for less technical users.
-
I can't send WoL packet through Zerotier
Probably easier, if you have a small computer at home, put something like this on it https://github.com/sameerdhoot/wolweb with zerotier.
What are some alternatives?
caddy-wol - Caddy plugin that sends wake-on-lan magic packets to remote hosts to wake up e.g. reverse proxy targets.
rtsp-stream - Out of box solution for RTSP - HLS live stream transcoding. Makes RTSP easy to play in browsers.
supervisor-rs - Lite Rust version of supervisor, inspired by python version
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
autosuspend - A daemon to automatically suspend and wake up a system
ksync - Sync files between your local system and a kubernetes cluster.
displayplacer - macOS command line utility to configure multi-display resolutions and arrangements. Essentially XRandR for macOS.
drone-ssh - Drone plugin for executing remote ssh commands
create-go-app - ✨ A complete and self-contained solution for developers of any qualification to create a production-ready project with backend (Go), frontend (JavaScript, TypeScript) and deploy automation (Ansible, Docker) by running only one CLI command.
werf - A solution for implementing efficient and consistent software delivery to Kubernetes facilitating best practices.