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I don't know much about bridging but I think that says you've<br>
bridged the wired interface and the internet.<br>
<br>
Get rid of the bridge and try creating a 2nd subnet for wlp2s0 like<br>
I said in an earlier post:<br>
<br>
<font color="#993300"><tt>I would suggest setting wlp2s0 as a
different subnet, say 10.1.2.1/24</tt><tt><br>
</tt><tt> and create an additional subnet declaration in DHCP with
option routers</tt><tt><br>
</tt><tt> 10.1.2.1. 'yellow' should route between 10.1.1.0/24 and
10.1.2.0/24</tt><tt><br>
</tt><tt> for your internal devices.</tt><tt><br>
</tt><tt> </tt></font><br>
Bill<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 1/27/2018 6:20 PM, A wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:f1884f9f-9043-f84f-9e27-8c06c41b40e7@bak.rr.com">....
blue now receives an IP of .14; neither machine can ping the
other, though each can ping its own assigned IP.<br>
<br>
# brctl show<br>
bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces<br>
br0 8000.7085c23b1324 no enp4s5<br>
enp6s0<br>
</blockquote>
<br>
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