• @jmanes
    link
    English
    2
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    I’ve been using Linux for 15 years. Tinkering with WSL is not as fruitful as tinkering with Linux.

    The link you provided for DNS is exactly the solution I was describing in my original post. It never worked for me, though. We have a custom DNS setup in-house and simply setting the nameserver doesn’t work. It is far too much of a hassle, so we just spin up wsl-vpnkit when we need network access.

    Mac users and Linux native users don’t have these issues and everything works out of the box.

    The performance I get when compiling and running integration tests through Rancher desktop integration on WSL is abysmal. Taking 30+ minutes to complete whereas for other employees on Macs see things done in under 5 minutes. Not sure if there is a WSL specific firewall / networking issue or what. If you look up “WSL2 poor network performacne” you’ll see dozens of open GitHub issues. It is very non-deterministic. Some days it runs great, other days it is terrible.

    I assume I’ll have a million of other replies coming along that link me to random benchmarks and articles about how great WSL2 is, but I’m telling you, I use it every single day at my job as a software engineer. It has problems. I’m grateful it exists and that I can hack it just enough to work (sometimes), but it is nothing like using Linux natively.

    • communistcapy
      link
      fedilink
      English
      01 year ago

      To be clear I wasn’t trying to say WSL replaces Linux. Just trying to help with your issues. I use WSL on Windows but I still also use native Arch (btw).