You might try waiting until after the system wakes up and then open an Administrative Command prompt and type the following command.
powercfg /lastwake
Copy and attach the output if you want. But you are not being specific about when it wakes up. If it is close to the same time every day, it might be Windows Update, or a Maintenance operation. It is very common for a network request to wake a system, so check your Network Adapter to make sure it is not set to wake the system.
There may also be some settings in the Bios which might allow it to start up even when shutdown....from a network request.
You might try waiting until after the system wakes up and then open an Administrative Command prompt and type the following command.
powercfg /lastwake
Copy and attach the output if you want. But you are not being specific about when it wakes up. If it is close to the same time every day, it might be Windows Update, or a Maintenance operation. It is very common for a network request to wake a system, so check your Network Adapter to make sure it is not set to wake the system.
There may also be some settings in the Bios which might allow it to start up even when shutdown....from a network request.
I just realized that I had a USB 3.0 update to 3.1, has been updated. In front do not have USB 3.0, is where on keyboard in 2.0. In background is the mouse but is in a 2.0. The inputs 3.0 are free.It is probably a USB device connected to the controller on one of the USB 3.0 ports.
I have seen mice which will move enough from vibration to wake a system. If not that, do you have anything else beside the keyboard connected to a USB port? You could try disconnecting any device to see if it helps.
Got it, good idea!On the x99-Deluxe motherboards the bios update with the 3.1 were recalled. Maybe there was some reason for that. My X99-Pro board is running normally with that bios update.
I would suggest you just unplug all USB devices for testing, you can always plug them back in.
You might try moving the mouse or keyboard while it is asleep and then compare that know device with the unknown one using the powercfg command.
I don't know if anything might appear to be a USB device, such as some type of Bluetooth device, but something to consider. Phones could be such a device if it worked that way.
Sorry, I do not speak English, if you can be more simplified for me to understand please, thank you.Most Asus motherboards allow wake by network. Did you ever have a usb network stick installed on this machine… It’s a long shot, I know but perhaps something is pinging your router?
Not, I believe that what is causing this "wake up" on my PC is a program: "Intel Smart Connect Technology" which is updating the system periodically.Try Saltglass first then if that doesn't work...
Have you got one of these?
View attachment 29460
or
View attachment 29461
I got the solution here: https://communities.intel.com/thread/61910You might try waiting until after the system wakes up and then open an Administrative Command prompt and type the following command.
powercfg /lastwake
Copy and attach the output if you want. But you are not being specific about when it wakes up. If it is close to the same time every day, it might be Windows Update, or a Maintenance operation. It is very common for a network request to wake a system, so check your Network Adapter to make sure it is not set to wake the system.
There may also be some settings in the Bios which might allow it to start up even when shutdown....from a network request.
Yes, with these commands is easier to know what causes a "auto wake".Glad you got it working. The -devicequery also shows my mouse and keyboard, which is the way I have them set....
Maybe reinstalling the drivers helped something.....