I also followed my usual yabs standard practice of creating a new user just for that, but noticed that under WSL2, even if you su to a new user, you still have the windows permissions of the user that ran wsl, so it seems a bit dangerous still. I'm almost tempted to try it out on my work machine (Ryzen 7 5800X, 64GB RAM, 3080 12GB and 4x2TB Samsung 980 PRO, the newest 2 are striped in a RAID0), but I have a very strict rule about not installing anything not work related. Uztelecom | Tashkent, UZ (10G) | 235 Mbits/sec | 304 Mbits/sec |Ĭlouvider | NYC, NY, US (10G) | 324 Mbits/sec | 522 Mbits/sec |Ĭlouvider | Dallas, TX, US (10G) | 187 Mbits/sec | 476 Mbits/sec |Ĭlouvider | Los Angeles, CA, US (10G) | 195 Mbits/sec | 285 Mbits/sec | NovoServe | North Holland, NL (40G) | 527 Mbits/sec | 538 Mbits/sec | Scaleway | Paris, FR (10G) | 525 Mbits/sec | 526 Mbits/sec | Provider | Location (Link) | Send Speed | Recv Speed | PingĬlouvider | London, UK (10G) | 532 Mbits/sec | 526 Mbits/sec | Processor : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-6700K CPU 4.00GHz I didn't even know this was a thing, so I just tried it out on my crappy old desktop: bash yabs.sh |tee yabs1.txt Said: decided to YABS my home pc via WSL2
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