Greetings! So recently, i spent a few hours coding software. After i was done and i shut off my pc, i noticed both of the ethernet lights were on and blinking. Does this mean that Microsoft is sending data to their servers before the PC fully shuts off? I am scared that this might be the thing it does. How can i get rid of this issue? I have no idea if it’s related to Windows or the PC itself.

      • sneaky@r.nf
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        2 months ago

        Power to the port may be hardwired for that feature to exist even though you have it disabled. Usually older models, but some do stay on just from being powered.

        If it’s a privacy concern check at your router and see if it holds an address.

  • lazynooblet@lazysoci.al
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    2 months ago

    Your PC network card keeps the connection up in order to receive wake on LAN requests.

    Any link activity whilst the PC is shutdown is packets that were broadcasted to the entire network. Other PCs, DHCP requests, etc send traffic to all devices on the network. So seeing some traffic whilst it’s off is nothing to worry about.

  • oxomoxo@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You computer has a feature for Out of Band management. Either WoL as others have mentioned or vPro(Intel), iLon(HP), iDrac(Dell), as well a few other less popular systems depending on who makes your mainboard or NIC.

    This leaves the power on to the network card so that it can be used even with your computer off. It does not have access to your normal computer in the this case. Just the ability to turn on/off the system and sometimes options to update BIOS/UEFI firmware and send a console image to either a client or browser.

    The lights are blinking because broadcasts packets from other devices on your LAN are sent to every device. This is normal and expected behavior.

    • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      2 months ago

      The lights are blinking because broadcasts packets from other devices on your LAN are sent to every device. This is normal and expected behavior.

      Just building off of this, modern computers are chatty as heck and there’s just constantly little bits of chatter spamming out on LANs. This is normal and expected behavior

  • foremanguy@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    As other said, it’s surely related to the LAN traffic and not the WAN traffic only your router sends some packets but it shouldn’t be Windows. Little tips if you don’t want telemetry and tracking, simply use Linux.

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Maybe but probably not. Its just frames coming in from the rest of the network. The device on the other end doesn’t know the computer is off.

    Alternatively if the card still has power it might be just in the state Windows left it in. I could imagine it would be good to not have to reinitialize the card all the time.

    Why are you concerned about telemetry on shutdown? That wouldn’t make any sense as it sends your data and checks the system status in the background while you use your computer. Also it is not great practice to totally shutdown at night as that’s the time when update happen. It also could theoretically wear out hardware but chances are that’s not a problem on newer machines

    • ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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      2 months ago

      Also it is not great practice to totally shutdown at night as that’s the time when update happen.

      updates can be installed when it’s turned on, though, and it well consume much less power.

      It also could theoretically wear out hardware but chances are that’s not a problem on newer machines

      what do you mean? I don’t understand.
      if you mean the HDDs spinning down and up, then

      • if it only happens at shutdown, it shouldn’t wear them out, additionally as I know HDDs (consumer models at least) don’t like endless spinning either
      • windows probably shuts it down regularly when it’s not in use. this is a setting in the power profile
      • as I know, frequent spindowns only increase wear out if it happens very often, like every 10 seconds and such because of the drive’s garbage internal power saving setting. that’s why I always keep it at least 30 minutes or more
      • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        I’ve never seen hardware die because of repeated shutdowns. Also most people aren’t running HDDs these days as flash storage is cheap and plentiful.

        For updates you need to be turned on for them to install. That’s why shutting it down isn’t good practice. Just set a maintenance window and put the computer to sleep.

        • ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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          2 months ago

          I’ve never seen hardware die because of repeated shutdowns

          then why do you recommend to keep the computer on for a longer life?

          but in the case of hard drives, this is a real thing, just not at that scale of shutdowns. if you don’t find sources on this let me know and I’ll show some.

          For updates you need to be turned on for them to install. That’s why shutting it down isn’t good practice. Just set a maintenance window and put the computer to sleep.

          of course, the installation will get prepared while the computer in on. it will have plenty of time being turned on.
          but most updates, including a lot of security updates only apply when restarting the updated software, like shutting down the operating system.

    • refalo@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      the link light is powered by the switch

      No it’s not. If you don’t believe me, unplug your PC’s power cord and watch the light go out.

      If the power cord is plugged in but the computer is shutdown, and the light is still on, then that means the network adapter supports WoL or OOB management and must stay on for that reason, but the network switch connected to the adapter is not physically powering any lights.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        2 months ago

        If the power cord is plugged in but the computer is shutdown, and the light is still on, then that means the network adapter supports WoL or OOB management and must stay on for that reason

        Also worth noting that Windows is especially bad about actually shutting down when you tell it to shut down because something something fastboot. I’ve seen similar inconsistently on Linux but I strongly suspect that to be more edgecases with specific hardware and my install.