Book Image

Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 (WSL 2) Tips, Tricks, and Techniques

By : Stuart Leeks
Book Image

Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 (WSL 2) Tips, Tricks, and Techniques

By: Stuart Leeks

Overview of this book

Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) allows you to run native Linux tools alongside traditional Windows applications. Whether you’re developing applications across multiple operating systems or looking to add more tools to your Windows environment, WSL offers endless possibilities. You’ll start by understanding what WSL is and learn how to install and configure WSL along with different Linux distros. Next, you'll learn techniques that allow you to work across both Windows and Linux environments. You’ll discover how to install and customize the new Windows Terminal. We'll also show you how to work with code in WSL using Visual Studio Code (VS Code). In addition to this, you’ll explore how to work with containers with Docker and Kubernetes, and how to containerize a development environment using VS Code. While Microsoft has announced support for GPU and GUI applications in an upcoming release of WSL, at the time of writing these features are either not available or only in early preview releases. This book focuses on the stable, released features of WSL and giving you a solid understanding of the amazing techniques that you can use with WSL today. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to configure WSL and Windows Terminal to suit your preferences, and productively use Visual Studio Code for developing applications with WSL.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction, Installation, and Configuration
5
Section 2:Windows and Linux – A Winning Combination
11
Section 3: Developing with the Windows Subsystem for Linux

Overview of containers

Containers provide a way of packaging up an application and its dependencies. This description might feel a bit like a virtual machine (VM), where you have a file system that you can install application binaries in and then run later. When you run a container, however, it feels more like a process, both in the speed with which it starts and the amount of memory it consumes. Under the covers, containers are a set of processes that are isolated through the use of features such as Linux namespaces and control groups (cgroups), to make it seem like those processes are running in their own environment (including with their own file system). Containers share the kernel with the host operating system so are less isolated than VMs, but for many purposes, this isolation is sufficient, and this sharing of host resources enables the low memory consumption and rapid start up time that containers can achieve.

In addition to container execution, Docker also makes it easy...