Three days after beating League Two leaders Stockport to secure a place in the third round, the Shots found themselves 3-0 down at half-time thanks to goals from Paul McCallum and Bailey Clements and an own goal from Coby Rowe.
McCallum grabbed his second of the game early in the second half and Scott Quigley made it 5-0 on the hour mark before substitute Jack Barham pulled one back and Josh Stokes made it 5-2.
Enzio Boldewijn was then sent off for his part in a brawl which saw five other players booked before Stokes scored his second in the fifth minute of added time.
The Bees looked certain to maintain their 100 per cent start to the season as they surged into a 3-0 lead after just 30 minutes.
Idris Kanu tapped in at the far post to get the ball rolling after 15 minutes and four minutes later it was two as Danny Collinge headed in his third goal of the season.
Kanu’s second looked to have wrapped the points up on the half-hour mark before McCallum got Eastleigh back in it on the stroke of half-time with a cool finish after a counter-attack.
Scott Quigley made the Bees sweat midway through the second half and McCallum earned a point seven minutes into stoppage time when he headed home.
Darren McQueen gave Fleet a seventh-minute lead from Ben Chapman’s cross but McCallum equalised 10 minutes later when he headed in Chris Maguire’s free-kick.
McQueen twice went close to a second but it was McCallum who instead doubled his personal tally when he scrambled home five minutes before the break.
Scott Quigley netted the third after being sent through by Maguire and after keeper Joe McDonnell brilliantly denied McQueen with a double intervention, Quigley turned provider for McCallum’s third.
McQueen pulled one back before Maguire had the final say from a stoppage-time penalty, with Fleet substitute Billy Clifford then shown a red card.
The visiting Cardinals went ahead 10 minutes before half-time when Tunji Akinola nodded home a pinpoint free-kick from Josh Casey at the back post.
Charlie Carter’s hard work helped the hosts equalise, keeping the ball alive and allowing James McShane a chance to send the sides in level at the interval.
After a brief delay for an injured assistant referee, Woking put together the winning move, Osew converting confidently after a Padraig Amond lay-off.
Akinola thought he had his second late on, but the officials waved away claims that the ball had crossed the line, the result remained to send Woking 17th and ahead of their opponents on goal difference.
Fonkeu converted Josh Parker’s cross in the 54th minute to snap a three-game losing streak for Ross Jenkins’ newly promoted side.
The hosts had the better of the opening period with Adam Senior coming close and Jamie Cook striking the post shortly before the half-hour mark.
Rob Harker grabbed the opener after 32 minutes when he went clear through on goal and held his nerve to slot the ball past visiting keeper Chris Haigh.
Reece Fleet went close for Halifax at the start of the second half before Fonkeu’s effort levelled for Oxford and the hosts went in search of a late winner to no avail.
The hosts were on course for victory after just two minutes as an Eddie Jones ball went in off goalkeeper George Sykes-Kenworthy for an own goal.
Justin Amaluzor doubled the lead in the 26th minute and Jake Cooper added a third on the stroke of half-time.
Maz Kouhyar pulled one back just after the hour but an Alex Newby double, either side of a Chris Conn-Clarke effort, put the result beyond all doubt.
Having lost at Fylde on Thursday night, Gateshead got themselves in front through a penalty from Luke Hannant in the 54th minute.
The Magpies, who were on an unbeaten four-game run, fought back to equalise with six minutes left when Kevin Lokko flicked the ball in after a free-kick.
Maidenhead then snatched all three points in the third minute of stoppage time when striker Shawn McCoulsky ran onto a long ball to slot home a dramatic winner, which ended any lingering relegation worries.
Oldham goalkeeper Mathew Hudson was in form, making saves to deny Omari Sterling-James, Rakish Bingham and Toby Edser.
Edser also shot wide and Dominic Poleon went close as Ebbsfleet applied further pressure in the second half.
At the other end, Mark Cousins kept out an effort from James Norwood and Mike Fondop shot wide late on.
Having come close just minutes beforehand, Inih Effiong gave the Daggers the lead in the 40th minute, pouncing on a rebound from Ryan Hill’s initial shot to fire home at the back post.
Fylde striker Luke Charman caused problems and had a good chance go over the bar just before half-time and the hosts found the equaliser in the 76th minute when Harry Phipps turned the ball into his own net.
A point lifts the Coasters off the bottom of the National League table, while Dagenham remain 18th.
Rakish Bingham was the hero for the home team with a hat-trick after Dominic Samuel had opened the scoring in the eighth minute – Bingham providing the assist.
That came four minutes after defender Louis Storey, who is also interim assistant manager, was sent off for a bad challenge on Samuel.
Gateshead unexpectedly led at half-time through a double from Callum Whelan but Bingham levelled from the penalty spot following a handball in the 52nd minute and put Ebbsfleet ahead with a diving header 11 minutes later before completing his treble in injury time.
High-flying Bromley had let a two-goal lead slip to lose at home to Aldershot in midweek, but Andy Woodman watched his promotional hopefuls bounce back in style on the road.
Cheek opened the scoring after five minutes when he fired into the bottom corner after a fine team move and it was 2-0 four minutes before half-time when the forward rifled home after a corner.
Emmanuel Dieseruvwe reduced the deficit in the 52nd-minute with a header from Nicky Featherstone’s corner, but Ben Krauhaus restored Bromley’s two-goal advantage soon after with an excellent finish after Louis Dennis’ pass.
Olufela Olomola wrapped up a superb away win for Bromley with a fourth in stoppage-time.
Tyrese Sinclair slotted home from a tight angle after 15 minutes, capitalising on an error from home goalkeeper Joe Day.
Scott Cuthbert headed an equaliser after the break and Woking were ahead on 74 minutes when Padraig Amond was fouled and Reece Grego-Cox dispatched the penalty.
Grego-Cox grabbed his second eight minutes later before Kairo Mitchell provided some late consolation for Dale.
A tight first half ended goalless with neither side having troubled the opposition keeper unduly.
Maidenhead’s Charlee Adams blazed a 34th-minute free-kick over and fellow midfielder Casey Pettit failed to hit the target with Sam Ling equally inaccurate for the visitors in a late flurry as the halftime whistle approached.
Midfielder Smith broke the deadlock for the home side 12 minutes after the restart when he blasted a shot into the top corner.
Adams saw a 71st-minute strike tipped over by keeper Elliot Justham, but Smith’s contribution proved enough to claim the points.
The forward opened the scoring for the visitors in the sixth minute with a low drive but Scott Cuthbert cancelled out the lead, converting a Nana Boateng free-kick 10 minutes later.
Reece Grego-Cox’s header put the Cardinals into the lead just before the half-hour and this time it was their turn to endure a quick response as Matthew Kosylo levelled in the 38th minute.
Linney would have the last say, however, as his goal two minutes into the second half settled the contest.
City had lost nine of their 11 matches since beating Ebbsfleet two months ago but Josh Parker’s 24th-minute goal decided the points.
Parker converted a ball from Lewis Coyle and, despite Wealdstone’s efforts to find an equaliser, which included Charlie Barker’s header being cleared off the line in stoppage time, City held on.
The result leaves Wealdstone three points above the relegation zone but with games in hand on those around them.
Chadwick broke the deadlock just before the hour-mark and Akinyemi added a second as the Minstermen made it four wins from their last six matches to edge six points clear of the drop zone.
Former Hull midfielder Chadwick had forced Will Jaaskelainen into a superb first half save, but the Woking goalkeeper had no chance with his low angled finish in the 59th minute.
York doubled their lead in the 73rd minute when skipper Lenell John-Lewis slipped in Akinyemi and the forward curled an excellent finish inside Jaaskelainen’s far post.
The Hampshire club opened the scoring from the penalty spot in the 19th minute, with Chris Maguire sending Sam Johnson the wrong way and finding the bottom corner, after Paul McCallum had been fouled.
McCallum tapped in a loose ball to double the Spitfires’ advantage in the 54th minute and completed his double, following good work from Enzio Boldewijn, with 17 minutes to go.
Florent Hoti scored with 11 minutes remaining to give the hosts hope and with three minutes remaining Jordan Keane headed in a corner to reduce the deficit to one – but that was as far as Halifax’s comeback was to go.
The Cards opened the scoring through Ricky Korboa, who capitalised on a Zak Bradshaw cross in the 34th minute.
Chances continued to come for both sides, with Woking’s Padraig Amond among those unable to take advantage.
Eventually they did double their lead, with Dennon Lewis making it two late on.
Pools had the best first-half chance after 32 minutes when striker Mani Dieseruvwe hit a post and the ball fell to Joe Grey but he somehow cleared the crossbar from close in.
Woking scored twice in the early stages of the second half, with Korboa turning the ball home after some neat footwork for the opener before his tame effort from the edge of the area wrong-footed goalkeeper Pete Jameson and crept in.
Hartlepool tried to find a way back into the game without creating any clear-cut chances as opponents Woking moved above them in the National League table with a third game unbeaten on the road.
Goalkeeper Will Jaaskelainen produced a superb 15th-minute save to keep out midfielder Chris Conn-Clarke’s free-kick as it headed towards the top corner, with the home side enjoying the better of the first half.
However, they were unable to trouble Jaaskelainen often enough to make it count with striker Alex Newby failing to test him from distance in stoppage time.
The visitors enjoyed a better start to the second half with Jermaine Anderson firing over from distance, and Altrincham defender Lewis Banks managed to scramble Charley Kendall’s header away from goal after the ball had come back off the post.
Lewis Baines repeated the feat amid a goalmouth scramble as the whistle approached, but the hosts finally succumbed when substitute Kevin Berkoe picked out Korboa, who beat his man and then the keeper to snatch victory.