Ok guys im not sure what went wrong here, but I'll start at the beginning.
I created a Windows 10 VM through Virtual Machine Manager, I needed the Win10 VM on my main network, so I created a bridge in VMM through (edit > connection details > network interfaces).
Everything was working great...until I rebooted my computer 2 weeks later. I had forgotten all about the bridge and it took me 2 days to figure out why I suddenly had no network connections at all, not even an adapter was listed in settings.
So now here is what I have to do every time I reboot my computer. I have to open VMM and enable the bridge (br1) manually, despite the fact that it is set to "Start Mode: onboot", and then even more hilarious, I have to start my Win10 VM, if the VM isnt running, then Ubuntu has no network connectivity at all. Once i manually bring up the bridge, and manually start the VM, and once Windows has fully booted, my network connection works perfectly fine until the next time I reboot.
I am running Ubuntu 18.04
I created a Windows 10 VM through Virtual Machine Manager, I needed the Win10 VM on my main network, so I created a bridge in VMM through (edit > connection details > network interfaces).
Everything was working great...until I rebooted my computer 2 weeks later. I had forgotten all about the bridge and it took me 2 days to figure out why I suddenly had no network connections at all, not even an adapter was listed in settings.
So now here is what I have to do every time I reboot my computer. I have to open VMM and enable the bridge (br1) manually, despite the fact that it is set to "Start Mode: onboot", and then even more hilarious, I have to start my Win10 VM, if the VM isnt running, then Ubuntu has no network connectivity at all. Once i manually bring up the bridge, and manually start the VM, and once Windows has fully booted, my network connection works perfectly fine until the next time I reboot.
I am running Ubuntu 18.04