Mintty as a terminal for WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux).
WSLtty components
- wsltty package components (see below) in the user’s local application folder
%LOCALAPPDATA%
- a wsltty configuration directory in the user’s application folder
%APPDATA%
(“home”-located configuration files from a previously installed version will be migrated to the new default location) - Start Menu shortcuts to start WSL terminals
- Desktop shorcut to start a terminal for the default WSL distribution
*.bat
scripts to invoke WSL terminals from the command line- optional context menu entries for Windows Explorer to start WSL terminals in the respective folder
- install/uninstall context menu items from Start Menu subfolder
WSLtty
To connect to WSL, wsltty uses wslbridge2, which uses undocumented Windows APIs that have been changed various times, so wslbridge2 needed to catch up with incompatible changes, particularly to support WSL V2. (See e.g. issue #343; to work with WSL V2, wsltty 2.0.0 needed a WSL update to release 1.3.17.)
Since release 3.0.5, WSLtty requires Windows version 1809 (the November 2018 release).
By end of 2024, wsltty works again with recent updates of the WSL subsystem.
WSLtty installer (Download standalone installation)
From the release downloads, run the wsltty-VERSION-x86_64-install.exe installer to install the components listed above. Make sure to select a 64-bit installer on a 64-bit system. If Windows complains with a “Windows protected your PC” popup, you may need to click “Run anyway” to proceed with the installation. You may need to open the Properties of the installer first, tab “General” section “Security” (if available) and select “Unblock”, to enable the “Run anyway” button.
For a portable installation, e.g. on a USB stick, choose the
“-install-portable.exe” file for download. Installation will prompt
for a portable installation folder interactively.
For example, choosing U:\opt
will create and use folder
U:\opt\wsltty
both as installation directory and configuration directory.
Portable installation does not install any start menu or desktop shortcuts
and no context menu entries. It creates a shortcut in the selected
portable installation folder to start the default WSL distribution.
Note: For an update installation, either the parent directory or the target directory itself can be selected.
Note: If you rename or move the installation directory, the icon of the “WSL Terminal Portable” shortcut will not work anymore; re-run the install-portable.bat script in the installation folder to refresh it.
In case a local anti-virus guard barfs about the wsltty installer, the
release also contains a .cab
file. Download it, open it, extract its files
to some temporary deployment directory, and invoke install.bat
from there,
or install-portable.bat
for a portable installation.
The wsltty-VERSION-x86_64-install-quiet.exe installer is intended for integration in another installation framework.
Checkout the wsltty repository, or download the source archive, unpack and rename the directory to wsltty
.
Install Alpine WSL from the Microsoft Store.
Invoke make build
, then make install
.
Note this has to be done within a Cygwin environment. A minimal Cygwin
environment for this purpose would be installed with the
Cygwin installer
from cygwin.com,
with additional packages make
, gcc-g++
, unzip
, zoo
, patch
, (lcab
).
Install a minimal Cygwin environment plus the additional packages as
listed for «Installation from source repository».
Invoke make pkg
or just make
.
(For experts)
Within the installation process, provide parameters to the script install.bat
.
The optional first parameter designates the installation target,
the optional second parameter designates the configuration directory.
Note: These are 3rd-party packages, not managed by this repository.
(Check package) To install wsltty from the Windows Package Manager Community Repository, invoke one of
winget install wsltty
winget upgrade wsltty
(Check package) If you use the Chocolatey package manager, invoke one of
choco install wsltty
choco upgrade wsltty
(Check package) If you use the Scoop package manager,
scoop bucket add extras
then, invoke one of
scoop install wsltty
scoop update wsltty
To uninstall wsltty desktop, start menu, and context menu integration:
Open a Windows cmd
, go into the wsltty installation folder:
cd %LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty
and run the uninstall
script.
To uninstall wsltty software completely, remove the installation folder manually.
WSLtty can be invoked with
- installed Start Menu shortcuts (or Desktop shortcuts if copied there)
- *.bat scripts (optionally with WSL command as parameters) (see Command line scripts below)
- Explorer context menu (if installed from the Start Menu
WSLtty
subfolder)
Starting the mintty terminal directly from the WSLtty installation location is discouraged because that would bypass essential options.
Terminal communication with WSL via its modes V1 or V2 is handled automatically by wsltty (mintty and the wslbridge2 gateway).
If wsltty fails with an
Error: Could not fork child process: Resource temporarily unavailable
...,
its runtime may be affected by some over-ambitious virus defense strategy.
For example, with Windows Defender, option “Force randomization for images”
should be disabled.
If wsltty fails with an error message that mentions a disk mount path (e.g. /mnt/c
),
workarounds may be the shutdown of the WSL V2 virtual machine (wsl --shutdown
on the distro)
or turning off “fast startup” in the Windows power settings (#246, #248).
With WSL V2, an additional background shell is run which may cause trouble
for example when setting up automatic interaction between Windows side and
WSL side
(see #197 (comment)).
As a workaround, the following may be added to (the beginning of) the
WSL shell initialization script .bashrc
(adapt for other shells):
# work around https://github.com/mintty/wsltty/issues/197
if [[ -n "$WSL_DISTRO_NAME" ]]; then
command -v cmd.exe > /dev/null || exit
fi
In the Start Menu, the following shortcuts are installed:
- Shortcut
WSL Terminal
to start the default WSL distribution (as configured with the Windows toolwslconfig
orwsl -s
) - For each installed WSL distribution, for example
Ubuntu
, a shortcut likeUbuntu Terminal
to start in the WSL user home
In the Start Menu subfolder WSLtty, the following additional shortcuts are installed:
- Shortcut
WSL Terminal %
to start the default WSL distribution in the Windows %USERPROFILE% home - For each installed WSL distribution, for example
Ubuntu
, a shortcut likeUbuntu Terminal %
to start in the Windows %USERPROFILE% home
One Desktop shortcut is installed:
- Shortcut
WSL Terminal
to start the default WSL distribution (as configured with the Windows toolwslconfig
orwsl -s
)
Other, distribution-specific shortcuts can be copied to the desktop from the Start Menu if desired.
The Start menu folder WSLtty contains the link
configure WSL shortcuts
.
This function is initially run when wsltty is installed.
It should be rerun after adding or removing WSL distributions,
in order to create the respective set of shortcuts in the Start menu.
WSLtty installs the following scripts into %LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\WindowsApps
(and a copy in its application folder %LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty
):
- For each installed WSL distribution, e.g. Ubuntu, a command script like
Ubuntu.bat
to start in the current folder/directory - For each installed WSL distribution, e.g. Ubuntu, a command script like
Ubuntu~.bat
to start in the WSL user home WSL.bat
andWSL~.bat
to start the default WSL distribution
Given that %LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\WindowsApps
is in your PATH,
the scripts can be invoked from cmd.exe, PowerShell, or via WIN+R.
WSLtty provides context menu entries for all installed WSL distributions and one for the configured default distribution, to start a respective WSL terminal in a specific folder from an Explorer window. They are not installed by default.
To add launch entries for the default or all WSL distributions to the
Explorer context menu, or remove them, run the respective script from the
Start Menu subfolder WSLtty
:
add default to context menu
adds context menu entries for the default WSL distributionadd to context menu
adds context menu entries for all WSL distributionsremove from context menu
removes context menu entries for WSL distributions
Wsltty installation and the mintty terminal try to use the icon of the
respective WSL distribution. If it cannot be determined, a penguin icon
is used as a fallback. You can replace it with your preferred default icon
by replacing the icon file %LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty\wsl.ico
.
Mintty can maintain its configuration file in various locations, with the following precedence:
- file given with mintty option
-c
(not used by wsltty default installation) - file
config
in directory given with mintty option--configdir
%APPDATA%\wsltty\config
in the default wsltty installation
%HOME%\.minttyrc
(usage deprecated with wsltty)%HOME%\.config\mintty\config
(usage deprecated with wsltty)- common config file for all mintty installation instances
%APPDATA%\mintty\config
%LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty\etc\minttyrc
(usage deprecated with wsltty)
Note:
%APPDATA%\wsltty\config
is the user configuration file location. Further subdirectories of%APPDATA%\wsltty
are used for language, themes, and sounds resource configuration. Note the distinction from%LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty
which is the default wsltty software installation location.- The
%APPDATA%\mintty\config
option provides the possibility to maintain common mintty settings for various installations (like wsltty, Cygwin, MinGW/msys, Git for Windows, MinEd for Windows). - (About deprecated options) By default,
%HOME%
would refer to the root directory of the cygwin standalone installation hosting wsltty. So%HOME%
would mean%LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty\home\%USERNAME%
. If you defineHOME
at Windows level, this changes accordingly. Note, however, that the WSL$HOME
is a completely different setting.
Mintty and the wsltty package do not bundle actual emoji graphics but
there are scripts to support easy download and deployment.
If you have another instance of mintty installed (e.g. in cygwin)
and have emojis deployed already in the common config folder
%APPDATA%\mintty\emojis
, they will be reused by wsltty.
To deploy emojis standalone for wsltty, use the scripts installed in
%APPDATA%\wsltty\emojis
within WSL:
cd $(wslpath "$APPDATA/wsltty/emojis")
getemojis
to provide emoji graphics as listed by Unicode.orggetflags
to provide emoji flag graphics (extending Unicode dynamically) from various sources
The WSLtty deployment does not impose a shell preference;
it invokes the user’s default shell in login mode by the final -
parameter:
%LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty\bin\mintty.exe --WSL= --configdir="%APPDATA%\wsltty" -
You may tweak shortcuts, scripts, or context menu entries as follows:
To launch a default shell in non-login mode, remove the final dash.
To invoke your preferred shell, replace the final dash with
a shell pathname and an optional -l
parameter
%LOCALAPPDATA%\wsltty\bin\mintty.exe --WSL= --configdir="%APPDATA%\wsltty" /bin/bash -l
Character encoding setup by locale setting is propagated from the terminal towards WSL. So you can select your favourite locale with configuration options or with command-line options, for example in a copied dedicated desktop shortcut.
If for example you wish to run WSL in GB18030 encoding, you may set options
Locale=zh_CN
and Charset=GB18030
and the WSL shell will adopt that
setting, provided that the selected locale is configured to be available
in the locale database of the WSL distribution.
This can be achieved in Ubuntu with the following commands:
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/locales/supported.d
sudo echo zh_CN.GB18030 GB18030 >> /var/lib/locales/supported.d/local
sudo locale-gen
For mintty, see the Mintty homepage
(with further screenshots),
the Mintty manual page,
and the Mintty Wiki,
including a Hints and Tips page.
It is based on Cygwin and includes its runtime library (sources).
For interacting with WSL, wslbridge used to be the gateway prototype. Many thanks for this enabling gateway go to Ryan Prichard.
For recent changes in WSL, particularly WSL mode V2, the new gateway wslbridge2 is used instead. Many thanks for this further development and maintenance go to Biswapriyo Nath.