There are tons of gists available for this problem:
However even solution is there - I was not satisfied that this problem always persists and I had to do same steps again from time to time. Also using a static DNS like 8.8.8.8 was not the option for me because we use pool of enterprise DNS servers and those are controlled by our IT on our Windows machines. So I wanted to find the way to get those DNS servers dynamically from Windows.
This guide describes the permanent solution using brand-new WSL boot command.
This gist removes nameservers every time your WSL starts and adds newly from powershell results. If it doesn't work for you - please feel free to adjust the script according to your needs.
- login to your wsl and run
sudo bash
. It's important that you do this with a root user because it's a user which executes this command during boot - change to ~ folder ( or use any folder you like )
- create a new file for example
boot.sh
and update it with a content from boot.sh gist - make it executable with
chmod +x boot.sh
- create a symbolic link in one of PATH folders ( keep in mind, that for root user number of path folders is very limited by default )
/usr/local/sbin
/usr/local/bin
/usr/sbin
/usr/bin
/sbin
/bin
- i have used
ln -s ~/boot.sh /usr/local/bin/boot.sh
- having such a limited list of folders makes root not aware of powershell.exe and rest of window utilities. I have preferred to use an absolute path like
/mnt/c/Windows/System32/WindowsPowerShell/v1.0/powershell.exe
in my script - but you may think of creating a symlink for powershell too. - now let's add boot command to
/etc/wsl.conf
file. In my case it looks like this:
[network]
generateResolvConf=false
[boot]
systemd=true
command=boot.sh
- now just
exit
from bash, from wsl as well. Terminate your wsl with a command likewsl -t Ubuntu
and start again - if everything went well
cat /etc/resolv.conf
should have nameservers from your Windows
Thank you, this works for me.
Just want to not that to use dnsTunneling you need to be using Windows 11 with 22H2. I'm currently stuck on a Windows 10 with 22H2, and it doesn't work for me. So for the time being this Gist is the solution for me.