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I'm using WSL for some node development on a Windows 10 machine (build 1803). Inevitably, within a few hours of starting WSL, all ports on the system become bound. At this point, no new network connections open, and I effectively lose network access until I restart.
netstat -qn |findstr BOUND
This shows all TCP ports bound up to the max, such as:
TCP 0.0.0.0:60755 0.0.0.0:0 BOUND
I've tried using ipconfig to reset the windows side adapter, killing all WSL processes, and a bunch of other things, but nothing unbinds the ports. I'd like to be able to use my computer without having to restart every few hours.
I was able to find an open issue with limited info: https://github.com/Microsoft/WSL/issues/2523 but no solutions or workarounds.
Any way to reset WSL or open the ports would be much appreciated!
1What process/processes is/are responsible? if you run:
netstat -qno | find "BOUND"
, what is the PID (last column) and what does this map to in TaskManager/Tasklist.exe? – HelpingHand – 2019-01-27T23:31:08.283It seems to be adb, part of a cli for the Expo project I have. I expect it to open connections, as it's for remote debugging. But killing it or even WSL as a whole doesn't release the ports. – adeebm – 2019-01-28T03:03:34.387
It is surprising that killing the process doesn't clean up. Can you run the following PowerShell command and link the results:
get-nettcpconnection -state BOUND -OwningProcess ((Get-Process adb).ID)[0] | select LocalAddress, LocalPort, state
Note: I've put the process in asadb
is that correct? – HelpingHand – 2019-01-28T14:11:30.983By randomly killing processes, I found that 'init' in 'Local\Packages\CanonicalGroupLimited.UbuntuonWindows_79rhkp1fndgsc\LocalState\rootfs' seems to actually terminate WSL and release the ports. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction! – adeebm – 2019-01-30T00:38:33.380