I've got a problem with 802.11 bridging (they radios involved are in WDS mode). Basically the problem is managed (i.e. client) radio interfaces that are part of a bridge see their sent packets twice (once when they send and again when the master radio rebroadcasts). In /var/log/messages I see: ath0: received packet with own address as source address It appears that perhaps these packets are confusing the bridge about which MAC lives on which port and results in a failure to deliver packets in the correct direction. For example: A B C D bridge: bridge: bridge: host: eth0 eth0 eth0 --------- eth1 ath0(cl) ath0(ma) ath0(cl) Pings from D to A disappear in the ICMP reply direction when they get to C. They appear there but never show up at D. Likewise, pings from A to D disappear in the ICMP request direction when they get to C, and never appear at D. I say never, but actually they do sometimes, about 2% of the time. Pings from D to B and vice versa are fine. Even pings from D to other hosts hanging off of B's eth0 are fine. I'd like to figure out if I can somehow disregard the rebroadcasts or at least not let them booger the bridge tables, if that's what they are doing. Ideas how to better diagnose the problem are welcome. Thanks! -- Russell Senior ``I have nine fingers; you have ten.'' seniorr@aracnet.com