Few other notes: I am on the latest slow ring build, which is practically a necessity if you're using WSL. The build I'm on is probably about to be released publicly seeing as there's no version info on the desktop.
I did try this with Windows Firewall and my antivirus disabled. I also tried this with openSUSE aside from learning that WSL openSUSE is a mess, once I got it working I ran into the same issues as on WSL Debian & WSL Ubuntu. On Mon, Apr 2, 2018 at 3:59 PM, Jeffrey Fetterman <jfett...@mail.ccsf.edu> wrote: > oh, and the hang with HTTPS and repeating errors with HTTP is exactly the > same issue I'm experiencing, yes. > > On Mon, Apr 2, 2018 at 3:59 PM, Jeffrey Fetterman <jfett...@mail.ccsf.edu> > wrote: > >> Why'd you use your wife's laptop? You can have Debian and Ubuntu >> installed on the same machine. Typing 'bash' in command prompt will go to >> your primary (generally the first one you installed) and you just type the >> OS name to get one specifically. >> >> I was thinking of trying to get it running on openSUSE but I'm worried >> I'd just run into the same issue. >> >> On Mon, Apr 2, 2018 at 3:55 PM, Tim Rühsen <tim.rueh...@gmx.de> wrote: >> >>> Hi Jeffrey, >>> >>> >>> back then I installed Ubuntu via WSL. A fresh build of Wget2 took >>> ~30mins on my wife's laptop. Time-wasting. >>> >>> But I can reproduce a hang with HTTPS and (repeating) errors with HTTP. >>> >>> >>> This might be an issue with Windows Sockets... maybe someone has a >>> faster machine to do some testing !? >>> >>> >>> Regards, Tim >>> >>> On 02.04.2018 19:30, Jeffrey Fetterman wrote: >>> > I can tell you the exact steps I took from nothing to a fresh install, >>> > I have the commands copied. >>> > >>> > install Debian from Windows Store, set up username/password >>> > >>> > $ sudo sh -c "echo kernel.yama.ptrace_scope = 0 >> >>> > /etc/sysctl.d/10-ptrace.conf; sysctl --system -a -p | grep yama" >>> > (this is a workaround for Valgrind and anything else that relies >>> > on prctl(PR_SET_PTRACER) and the wget2 problem will occur either way) >>> > >>> > $ sudo apt-get update >>> > $ sudo apt-get upgrade >>> > $ sudo apt-get install autoconf autogen automake autopoint doxygen >>> > flex gettext git gperf lcov libtool lzip make pandoc python3.5 >>> > pkg-config texinfo valgrind libbz2-dev libgnutls28-dev libgpgme11-dev >>> > libiconv-hook-dev libidn2-0-dev liblzma-dev libnghttp2-dev >>> > libmicrohttpd-dev libpcre3-dev libpsl-dev libunistring-dev zlib1g-dev >>> > $ sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python >>> > /usr/bin/python3.5 1 >>> > >>> > then the commands outlined as per the documentation. config.log >>> attached. >>> > >>> > On Mon, Apr 2, 2018 at 11:53 AM, Tim Rühsen <tim.rueh...@gmx.de >>> > <mailto:tim.rueh...@gmx.de>> wrote: >>> > >>> > Hi Jeffrey, >>> > >>> > >>> > basically wget2 should work on WSL, I just tested it scarcely two >>> > weeks >>> > ago without issues. >>> > >>> > >>> > I suspect it might have to do with your dependencies (e.g. did you >>> > install libnghttp2-dev ?). >>> > >>> > To find out, please send your config.log. That allows me to see >>> your >>> > compiler, CFLAGS and the detected dependencies etc.. >>> > >>> > I will try to reproduce the issue then. >>> > >>> > >>> > Regards, Tim >>> > >>> > >>> > On 02.04.2018 17:42, Jeffrey Fetterman wrote: >>> > > wget2 will not download any files, and I think there's some >>> > sort of disk >>> > > access issue. >>> > > >>> > > this is on Windows Subsystem for Linux Debian 9.3 Stretch. >>> > (Ubuntu 16.04 >>> > > LTS had the same issue.) >>> > > >>> > > Here's the output of strace -o strace.txt -ff wget2 >>> > https://www.google.com >>> > > >>> > > https://pastebin.com/4MEL88qs >>> > > >>> > > wget2 -d https://www.google.com just hangs after the line >>> > '02.103350.008 >>> > > ALPN offering http/1.1' >>> > > >>> > > ultimately I might have to submit a bug to WSL but I wouldn't >>> > know what to >>> > > report, I don't know what's wrong. And it'd be great if there >>> was a >>> > > workaround >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> >>> >>> >> >