Tech Advisor

Microsoft debuts new Terminal app

Though the Sets tabbed interface may be dead within Windows, it’s alive on the Terminal. MARK HACHMAN reports

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Microsoft is preparing an updated Windows Terminal applicatio­n, alongside an updated Windows Subsystem for Linux, for power users who enjoy diving into the guts of the OS. The Linux subsystem now includes a full virtualize­d Linux kernel.

When Linux arrived on the Anniversar­y Edition three years ago, it was considered one of the more revolution­ary aspects of Windows – a surprising embrace of the open-source operating system that Microsoft had once resisted.

The firm unveiled both updates at Microsoft Build, its developer conference in Seattle. It said a preview of the Windows Terminal app is currently available, while the first WSL 2 preview will be available later this year.

Though both interfaces are typically predicated upon the command line, the new Terminal app looks more like Windows and the Edge web browser. There are tabs, just like Edge. There are tear-away windows. The new Terminal app also includes East Asian fonts, emojis and ligatures, plus support for themes and extensions, Microsoft said.

The Windows Subsystem for Linux is essentiall­y an embedded Linux window. The update, Windows

Subsystem for Linux 2 (or WSL 2), is based on the Linux 4.19 kernel, Microsoft said in a blog post. It will be based on an “in-house custom-built Linux kernel to underpin the newest version of the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)”, the company added.

The same technology is built within Azure, Microsoft said, and will reduce boot time and lower memory use to reduce its impact on the system. “WSL 2 also improves file system I/O performanc­e, Linux compatibil­ity, and can run Docker containers natively so that a VM is no longer needed for containers on Windows,” Microsoft said. Those will be achieved via patches Microsoft created.

The WSL kernel will be open sourced, Jack Hammons, a program manager in the Linux Systems Group at Microsoft, wrote. (Hammons explained more of the WSL changes and their relationsh­ip to open source in his blog post – see fave.co/2YthQhp.)

“The WSL kernel will be built using Microsoft’s world-class CI/CD systems and serviced through Windows Update in an operation transparen­t to the user,” he wrote. “The kernel will stay up to date with the newest features and fixes in the latest stable branch of Linux. To ensure the provenance of our sources we mirror repositori­es locally.”

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Terminal now supports multiple tabs

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