Microsoft Explains More About Their Windows Subsystem For Linux
At the end of March was the announcement about Ubuntu's user-space coming to Windows 10 via the Windows Subsystem for Linux implemented in the Windows kernel. There's a new Microsoft blog post explaining more of the inner-workings of WSL.
Deepu Thomas of Microsoft's Windows Kernel Team has written a lengthy article covering the Windows Subsystem for Linux. It covers how the subsystem is implemented, how it differs from a traditional VM approach, introduces the LXSS manager service, how unmodified Linux ELF64 binaries get implemented and the Windows NT kernel handles the Linux system calls, how the file-system interaction is done, and more.
If you are at all interested in the Windows Subsystem for Linux to run unmodified Ubuntu programs on Windows 10, see this MSDN blog post. In case you missed it, checkout the promising early benchmarks of Ubuntu user-space atop Windows.
Deepu Thomas of Microsoft's Windows Kernel Team has written a lengthy article covering the Windows Subsystem for Linux. It covers how the subsystem is implemented, how it differs from a traditional VM approach, introduces the LXSS manager service, how unmodified Linux ELF64 binaries get implemented and the Windows NT kernel handles the Linux system calls, how the file-system interaction is done, and more.
If you are at all interested in the Windows Subsystem for Linux to run unmodified Ubuntu programs on Windows 10, see this MSDN blog post. In case you missed it, checkout the promising early benchmarks of Ubuntu user-space atop Windows.
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