Well, your title and your question body don't seem quite aligned.
The question title says "use localhost", but then in the body you say "using a server name."
Accessing the Windows 10 service via the name "localhost" from WSL2? Let's just go with "no". I can think of a possibility of how to make it work, but it would be complicated.
But I think the second is really what you are looking for, so a couple of options that I can think of for accessing the Windows host services by hostname in WSL2:
First, and hopefully the easiest, WSL2 supports mDNS (WSL1 did not), so you should be able to access the Windows host as {hostname}.local
(where {hostname}
is the name of the Windows host (literally, in bash, ping $(hostname).local
, since the assigned WSL2 hostname is that of the host Windows 10 computer). That works for me. While I don't recall having to do anything special to enable this, this Super User answer seems to indicate that you have to turn it on manually.
The second option would be to add your Windows host IP to /etc/hosts
. If your Windows IP is static, then you could just add it manually to /etc/hosts
and be done. If it's dynamic, then you might want to script it. You can retrieve it from inside WSL2 via:
powershell.exe "(Test-Connection -ComputerName (hostname) -Count 1).IPV4Address.IPAddressToString"
(and other methods) and then use something like sed
to change /etc/hosts
.
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