![]() ![]() The fact that both of these applications are running "hidden" VMs leads me to believe that the cause of their invisibility in the manager is the same. Ignore the "New Virtual Machine", that is something manually created by me months before messing around with either of these apps - but it also proves that Hyper-V manager can see VMs correctly. I'd expect to be able to look at and poke around these VMs using the Hyper-V manager application like any other. WSL2 acts like a VM in most ways that matter, it has its own network interface and requires certain hoops to jump through to expose a service listening in the VM to the outside world.īluestacks explicitly mentions VM creation during its setup process. Two applications in specific, Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 and Bluestacks (an Android emulator) explicitly leverage Hyper-V, and require the windows feature to be enabled on the system you're running it on. ![]()
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