Okay, so there are a few things here. We (the CentOS Project) don't
currently publish anything that's easily consumable into WSL2 on the
mirrors or download pages. That's probably something we should address,
or at least talk about fixing. I can provide some directions below, but
they're very rough as I only started experimenting with this last night
once I saw your email.
First, create a directory on your windows system where you're going to
store your custom distro. I used C:\distros but you can use whatever
makes sense to you.
Second, you're going to need something that can understand the xz
archive format that's used these days rather than the older gz style.
7zip should do this fine, or optionally the tools straight from the
project/author - https://tukaani.org/xz/
Next, you'll want to pull the tarball we use to publish images to the
dockerhub. We use versions branches in this repo, so you pick what you
want. Here's the one for CentOS 8 currently ->
https://github.com/CentOS/sig-cloud-instance-images/blob/CentOS-8-x86_64/docker/centos-8-x86_64.tar.xz
(Advanced users can make their own tarballs here with livemedia-creator
or whatever is preferred)
Uncompress this archive, but don't unpack it. You want to end up with
CentOS-8-x86_64.tar
>From there, fire up a command prompt (Windows Terminal, cmd, powershell,
whatever). You can import this into wsl2 by running:
wsl.exe --import CentOS C:\distros\CentOS \path\to\CentOS-8-x86_64.tar
At this point you're "done" but it's not quite there.
if you want to stop here, you can simply run: wsl.exe -d CentOS
It'll work but you'll be running as root.
If you want to add your user, set up sudo, things like that you need to
do a bit more.
wsl.exe -d CentOS # to run it as root
useradd yourusername
dnf -y update
dnf -y install sudo # and whatever else you want
id -u yourusername # this is probably 1000
visudo # give your new user sudo access otherwise you'll lock yourself out.
Now, at this point I don't know an easy way to find the GUID of the
custom distro. I cheated and used the value from Windows Terminal's json
config file. Take that GUID and your user's UID and fire up regedit to
set your user as the default.
You'll want to look at
Computer\HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Lxss\$DISTRO_GUID
and set DefaultUid as a REG_DWORD to your user's uid (typically 1000).
That's as far as I've taken things so anything you want to do after this
you're kinda on your own.
On 8/17/20 7:47 AM, Dev Linux wrote:> I want to run CentOS 8.2 (2004) under Windows 10 Pro (2004) that comes with
> WSL2
>
> 1. Is there a list of steps anywhere, that would help me download what I
> need, and get CentOS 8.2 running under WSL2?
> 2. What would I need to download? (need direct URL - there are so many
> options for CentOS 8.2 , I am confused)
> 3. What steps would I need to take to get this running locally on my
> Windows 10 machine?
>
> Notes:
> ==> I don't want to run any existing CentOS available in the Windows
store,
> I want to roll my own
> ==> I don't want to run CentOS 8.2 under VirtualBox or any other
> virtualization technology, just WSL2
> ==> I don't want to download any .zip from a previous release that
is not
> CentOS 8.2, ideally would like to be self-sufficient and gain the knowledge
> on how to do this myself.
>
> ---
> If anyone has actually done this with CentOS 8.2 and WSL2 and has it
> working swimingly, please reply, would love to get this up and running for
> a higher level of productivity, scripting and automation on my Windows dev
> box.
> _______________________________________________
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS at centos.org
> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
--
Jim Perrin
The CentOS Project | http://www.centos.org
twitter: @BitIntegrity | GPG Key: FA09AD77