![]() ![]() ![]() I also rsync over things like my custom bin folder and configs directory to a Windows folder, where I've got a shell script created to provision a new WSL if something happens to my current one (happened once) or want to start a new WSL. To keep it all backed up, I just Rsync over my ~/Projects folder to an external drive every night and then my Windows backup software (Backup4All) copies that over to OneDrive. I keep the latest stable version of PHP and Node LTS installed in WSL, but most development is containerized (I use Docker Desktop). I can usually do what I want through the terminal or PHPStorm's git tools. I've got Gitkraken in there, but very seldomly need it. It's a little buggy, especially when menus open on my second monitor, but that's actually a long standing issue with Idea products and even happens on a machine running Ubuntu with more than 1 monitor. I've got a shortcut on my start menu to launch it, so no having to go into terminal for that. Developers who only use the command line are probably wasting time, probably making mistakes they shouldn't, almost certainly missing out on powerful enhancements to their workflow.I use PHPStorm running in WSL2 and x410. Of course, YMMV, but please don't continue to believe in the myth that using a command line is somehow a requirement to being a "real" developer. Still feels a bit weird for me, but it's 10x better than it was a couple of versions ago. Visual Studio is getting better all the time, though. Visual Studio Code's default source control is very limited (no code forensics to speak of), so be careful of defaulting to that one. ![]() Why an integrated rather than external Git client?
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