As shown in the figure, after the router connects to the outside wifi through the wds bridge, why is it still unable to access the Internet?

now the company uniformly uses wireless Internet access (a wireless network card is plugged into the desktop), but there is a cabin where there is no wireless signal. I have a wireless router (tp-link) on hand. Because of the problem of sharing the printer, I want the network in the cabin to be in the same local area network as the outside network, so I set up the router wds bridging. After the signal sent by the router is connected, the lan port of the network router has been set to the same network segment as the external wifi, and the dhcp of the router has been turned off. The wireless computer outside the link is not connected to the ping of the linked router

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    Since there is no wireless signal in the
  1. cabin, it means that the signal is already very bad. It doesn't make much sense to use WDS, which sacrifices bandwidth, even if it can be connected. Its significance is to expand the scope of use rather than improve the signal strength.
  2. the simplest and most rude way is to pull the wire. There are actually a lot of wireless holes.
  3. ip at the beginning of 172 is only common when there is a failure. Generally speaking, most of the intranet starts with 192, and if the DHCP is not enough, just make an opening in the mask.
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