maybe someone of you know the old project called "coLinux" :
Cooperative Linux is the first working free and open source method for optimally running Linux on Microsoft Windows natively. More generally, Cooperative Linux (short-named coLinux) is a port of the Linux kernel that allows it to run cooperatively alongside another operating system on a single machine. For instance, it allows one to freely run Linux on Windows 2000/XP/Vista/7, without using a commercial PC virtualization software such as VMware, in a way which is much more optimal than using any general purpose PC virtualization software. In its current condition, it allows us to run the KNOPPIX Japanese Edition on Windows.
CoLinux
is very old and not maintained for a lot of time and I'm not
interested in resurrecting it (and I don't have the competences to do
it),BUT I'm interested to gather some information about a similar
project that I have in mind. What about if,instead of having a Linux
kernel which can run Windows cooperatively,we have a Linux kernel that
can run more Linux distributions (maybe only 2 as a starting point,as
CoLinux already does) at the same time,without using virtualization
software ? Is the technology behind Colinux the same that's under the lxc or docker containers or the WSL2 subsystem ? What are the differences ?
I don't use WSL2,I don't use Windows so much. I like Linux and FreeBSD. So,an even nicer idea is to create a coLinux variant that allows the Linux kernel to cooperate with FreeBSD. This is even nicer than making a cooperation between 2 Linuxes.
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