Running on Windows Subsystem for Linux

Contact: @AndrewPardoe

The Compiler Explorer (“CE” from here on) runs quite well on the Windows Subsystem for Linux (“WSL”). Running on WSL enables Linux-based compilers to continue running natively while enabling Windows-based compilers to run in a real Windows environment.

No special configuration is needed to run CE under WSL. Some configuration is required for hosting the Microsoft Visual C++ (“MSVC”) compiler. Testing has mainly been done on the Ubuntu distro but any distro should work.

WSL/Windows interop and its limitations

WSL offers rich interop with Windows processes. You can run any Windows executable, such as “cl.exe”, from a bash shell. But this interop capability has some limitations.

  • Windows volumes: While Windows executables can be run from bash, they cannot see Linux volumes. Windows executables that need to read or write files must be run on a Windows volume. This means all MSVC compiles must be done in the Windows %TEMP% directory instead of in the bash environment's temp directory.
  • Path: The WSL path set in bash prepends the Windows path. While Linux filesystems support odd naming conventions such as spaces and parentheses, Windows' path uses these as a matter of course (e.g., c:\Program Files (x86)). Additionally, the Windows path delimiter is \ instead of /, and it uses drive letters instead of mount points that are separated with a colon.
  • Path names: A Windows path of c:\tmp is normally referred to as /mnt/c/tmp in bash. However, users can customize their drvfs mount points. A tool is provided in newer Windows releases, /bin/wslpath, that will convert paths between systems. Code in CE currently does the conversion between the standard conventions using string manipulation.
  • Environment variables: While the Windows path is available in bash, Windows environment variables are not. CE uses cmd.exe /c echo %TEMP% to determine the Windows temporary directory.
  • Execution environment: The execution environment cannot currently be set when doing childprocess.spawn. This is a serious issue for the MSVC compiler, which is highly environment-dependent (e.g., %INCLUDE%, %LIBPATH%, etc.)

Configuration

This section is intended for the many WSL users who are new to Linux.

If you plan on debugging CE, you should clone the CE repo on a Windows volume.

CE is built on node.js (“node”). The easiest way to install node is using NVM, the Node Version Manager. Run the following commands from a bash shell:

  • apt-get update to make sure apt is up-to-date
  • apt-get install build-essential libssl-dev, though you probably have these already
  • Check https://github.com/creationix/nvm/releases for the latest NVM release, substituting it in the next command.
  • curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.8/install.sh | bash to install NVM
  • source ~/.profile to reload your profile, bringing NVM into your environment
  • nvm ls-remote --lts to show the latest long-term supported (LTS) version of node.js
  • nvm install 10.15.3, substituting the latest LTS version, to install node.js

At this point you can change into the directory where you cloned CE and make. make will install a bunch of node packages and will finish with a message similar to this:

info: =======================================
info: Listening on http://localhost:10240/
info:   serving static files from 'static'
info:   git release bbf1407109d0439199f71bfdf4037fdeb0eb8393
info: =======================================

Now you can point your favorite web browser at http://localhost:10240 and see your own personal CE in action!

Code changes

CE only required a few changes in order to run properly under WSL. Those changes are listed here:

  • app.js:
    • process.env.wsl is set if CE if the string “Microsoft” in found in the output of uname -a. This works for all WSL distros as they all run on the base Microsoft Linux kernel.
    • If the -tmpDir option is specified on the command line, both process.env.tmpDir and process.env.winTmp are set to the specified value Note that if this is specified as a non-Windows volume, Windows executables will fail to run properly. Otherwise, process.env.winTmp is set to the value of the Windows %TEMP% directory.
  • lib/exec.js: Execute the compiler in the temporary directory. If the compiler's binary is located on a mounted volume (startsWith("/mnt")) and CE is running under WSL, run the compiler in the winTmp directory. Otherwise, use the Linux temp directory.
  • lib/compilers/wsl-vc.js: See also wine-vc.js, the Wine version of this compiler-specific file. These files provide custom behaviors for a compiler. This file does two interesting things:
    • The CompileCl function translates from Linux-style directories to Windows-style directories (/mnt/c/tmp to c:/tmp) so that CL.exe can find its input files.
    • The newTempDir function creates a temporary directory in winTmp. CEs creates directories under the temp directory that start with compiler-explorer-compiler where the compiland and compiler output lives. This is similar to the function in lib/base-compiler.js.
  • etc/config/c++.defaults.properties: Add a configuration (&cl19) for MSVC compilers. This edits in here are currently wrong in two ways, but it doesn‘t affect the main CE instance as it uses amazon properties files, and it doesn’t affect anyone running a local copy of CE because CE will just fail silently when it can't find a compiler.
    • The locations of these are hardcoded to a particular install location. See MSVC setup below for more information.
    • Setting of the %INCLUDE% path is done with the /I switch. This is very clunky and will fall over when command-line limits are hit but it‘s the only option currently as environments aren’t passed through when starting a Windows process from WSL.

Debugging

The only viable option for debugging under WSL is to use VS Code. Because VS Code doesn't currently run natively under WSL, you have to attach to a running CE instance. The following is a launch.json that works for attaching to an instance of CE that was launched with the --inspect flag.

{
    "version": "0.2.0",
    "configurations": [
        {
            "type": "node",
            "request": "attach",
            "name": "Attach to Process",
            "port": "9229",
            "address": "localhost",
            "protocol": "inspector",
            "localRoot": "${workspaceRoot}",
            "remoteRoot": "/mnt/c/src/compiler-explorer"
        }
    ]
}

Launch CE with make NODE_ARGS="--inspect" to have node listen on port 9229.

Because you can only attach to the process, as opposed to launching the process, you're limited to printf debugging for startup code. Search the code for logger.info to see examples of how to printf debug.

MSVC setup

TODO. There‘s no real MSVC setup at this point because there’s no good way to pass the environment to an invocation of CL.exe. Just point the properties file at your compiler binary and hack on the /I options until something works.

When I get this working in a generalized fashion, CE's config will expect that MSVC drops match the format used by the daily NuGet compiler drops at https://visualcpp.myget/org. (NuGet packages are just renamed ZIP files plus metadata so they make an easy distribution method for compiler toolset drops.)

Putting it all together

This should be enough information to get you started running CE under WSL. If there‘s information that you wish you would have had, please submit a PR to document. If there’s information you're lacking to get running, please enter an Issue on the CE repo or contact me directly.