There’s a very tiny bit of additional information in Microsoft’s own article. This is how it works:
At BUILD we demonstrated an early version of this work, running a few GUI sample apps directly from WSL such as Eye of Gnome, gedit and the mpv media player. These apps connected to a wayland server running inside of WSL, which communicated with a RDP client on the Windows host. You can see a screenshot of this in action below where we’re running the GNOME file manager in WSL and Outlook side by side.
So… if xwayland is available, Xlib would be there, too.
From what I read it is a wayland server. So there is no motif cross toolkit involved and as for Xlib and libXft, that depends on what is installed in the distro.
Same topic, which is advancing WSL integration with Windows, but that is more about bringing windows tech into Linux and this is the other way around, that is how I see it at least.
This needs way more technical information. Is Xlib available? libXft? Would this turn Motif into a cross platform toolkit? Etc.
There’s a very tiny bit of additional information in Microsoft’s own article. This is how it works:
So… if xwayland is available, Xlib would be there, too.
From what I read it is a wayland server. So there is no motif cross toolkit involved and as for Xlib and libXft, that depends on what is installed in the distro.
Same story I think? https://lobste.rs/s/7uny2c/directx_on_linux
Same topic, which is advancing WSL integration with Windows, but that is more about bringing windows tech into Linux and this is the other way around, that is how I see it at least.