![]() ![]() curl and apt-get, which is what I needed to use earlier, now works. Save with Ctrl-O, and you're off to the races – Internet Connectivity is back. Moving the IPv6 servers below (Ctrl-K to copy Ctrl-U to paste single line): Notice the IPv6 address at the top of the nameservers list. To fix you can bring up an editor like this: This is likely a temporary problem but definitely an issue in the current 15316 build of Windows 10 IP that I'm running. ![]() ![]() The simple fix, is to swap the the IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and – voila, network access works. The IPv6 addresses are first in the list and apparently that doesn't work. It appears the problem is that the Ubuntu subsystem doesn't deal properly with IPv6 IP Addresses that are listed by default in the network resolution file. But alas, in the Ubuntu Bash shell I get no connectivity. When you install the Ubuntu subsystem (from Windows Features), the system settings from Windows are copied into the nf file, so it inherits the current Windows settings, which should be fine since that clearly works in Windows. ![]() I started playing around with the Windows 10 Anniversary edition Bash shell in build 14316, and one of the first problems I ran into was that network connectivity wasn't working. ![]()
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