NOTE: If you have Windows 11 there is now an official way to do this in WSL 2, use it if possible - see MS post here (WINDOWS 11 ONLY)
This guide will enable systemd to run as normal under WSL 2. This will enable services like microk8s, docker and many more to just work during a WSL session. Note: this was tested on Windows 10 Build 2004, running Ubuntu 20.04 LTS in WSL 2.
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To enable
systemdunder WSL we require a tool calledsystemd-genie -
Copy the contents of
install-sg.shto a new file/tmp/install-sg.sh:cd /tmp wget --content-disposition \ "https://gist.githubusercontent.com/djfdyuruiry/6720faa3f9fc59bfdf6284ee1f41f950/raw/952347f805045ba0e6ef7868b18f4a9a8dd2e47a/install-sg.sh"
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Make it executable:
chmod +x /tmp/install-sg.sh
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Run the new script:
/tmp/install-sg.sh && rm /tmp/install-sg.sh -
Exit the WSL terminal and shutdown the WSL env:
wsl --shutdown
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To open a new WSL terminal with
systemdenabled, run:wsl genie -s -
Prove that it works:
sudo systemctl status time-sync.target
@4wk
Please, have you managed to restore the original state of your WSL installation? How?
I followed the same procedure described in the original post above before @redlinejoes comment and end up with a WSL installation that pops up the following error message every time I launch my Ubuntu-20.04 Linux server:
It doesn't happen if I launch my CentOS Stream 8 or 9 servers.
My WSL and Windows releases are:
Thanks!