WSA-Magisk
cassowary
WSA-Magisk | cassowary | |
---|---|---|
17 | 70 | |
227 | 2,627 | |
3.5% | - | |
6.6 | 0.0 | |
11 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Shell | Python | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
WSA-Magisk
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Xbox controller WSA support
And/but one may still prefer to build his own versions locally via MagiskOnWSALocal. And in the case of the WSA Preview builds which this project can't access on it's own*, MustardChef/WSAPackages shares these too.
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Microsoft just made it easier to get the most out of Android apps on Windows 11
It isn't. It's essentially rooting and flashing gapps onto the WSA "ROM" https://github.com/LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal
- Debloated Android Emulators!!! (Reposting cuz there's now also an Emulator for Android 12)
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How to get microG on WSA (official version) running properly?
But a more trouble-free way is to use MindTheGapps by repacking your own WSA via LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal.
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Wsa tools crash on Windows 11
WSA: 2303.40000.3.0 (LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal with MindTheGapps, Magisk-delta)
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wsa-gapps?
So, stick to LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal and build your own WSA with GApps etc with it's easy to use script. You can use WSL2 to make these WSA builds (as in, just go install Ubuntu from MS Store or something). No need to trust someone's personal project.
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Make WSA (Windows Subsystem for Android) Run on Windows 10
I was reading the linked repo in step 2 <https://github.com/LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal#magisk-on-wsa-wi...> and saw this message, which seems like utter nonsense:
> For fork developers: Please don't build using GitHub Actions, as GitHub will count your forked GitHub Actions usage against this upstream repository, which may cause this upstream repository gets disabled by GitHub staff like MagiskOnWSA because of numerous forks building GitHub Actions, and counting the forks' Action usage against this upstream repository.
is that even remotely true?
If there's any "disabled by GitHub staff" going on, it's likely due to DMCA nonsense, not due to forks having their GitHub Actions billed against the upstream repo. Related to that, I'm surprised to see the submitted repo distribute icu.dll and winhttp.dll, versus telling interested parties to extract them out of the Win11 ISO. I bet Microsoft won't bother striking the repo over to random dlls but why roll the dice?
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The OS to rule them all
Use this to rule Android from Windows (btw).
- WSA and OpenGAPPs Question.
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Guide for playing PUBG mobile on WSA on Windows 11?
Anyway, if you need to install & run the Android apps & games that rely on Google Play Games, do give this project a try: https://github.com/LSPosed/MagiskOnWSALocal. It's likely that you'll need to hide certain stuff from these apps/games btw and the official Magisk won't help you much (if any) in that case so ask again if your thing complains about that for an up to date answer by then (but then again, you're talking about PUBGay of all games so you may fail to achieve what you want anyway).
cassowary
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How are you running Windows only applications on your Linux ThinkPad?
I'm using virtualbox on my x220, of I really need windows. However, if you setup a VM from scratch anyway, I would rather go with KVM/QEMU and maybe even try https://github.com/casualsnek/cassowary, to launch the windows programms directly under Linux, with the VM running "in the background".
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Thinking of purchasing a 4080 laptop and replacing W11 with KDE plasma
Overall, don't be afraid to switch distro (use Ventoy, load a few ISOs just in case), try to make sure you have an easy way of backing up your stuff (be it with a separate /home partition, or like I do with storing everything important in a separate drive and then using symlink to make it 'appear' in their 'default' places), and you can always use VM in a pinch (consult this guide or use quickemu or gnome-boxes)
- STOP USING WINE. DARE
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Wanting to ditch windows 10 in favor of linux
In case some things you do absolutely needs Windows, keep this guide for setting up VM in mind, or use quickemu's GUI.
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Thinking about switching my SP8 to linux, but I have a few questions.
How are integrated VM solutions like cassowary on the surface pro? I need to run OneNote (this is a must as I am set all work on OneNote) to a decent level, with pen support.
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Is MS office a big driver of people moving to Linux?
Well, if I actually need office 365 for collaborating with someone, I use https://github.com/casualsnek/cassowary to actually run the Office Suite in a Windows VM and have it seeminglessly integrated into Linux.
- Get Off My Desktop! Windows Needs to Stop Showing Tabloid News - Microsoft’s distracting us with trashy articles when we’re trying to work.
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MicroOS Distrobox questions
Microsoft Office run in a Windows VM and integrated into Linux via Cassowary (https://github.com/casualsnek/cassowary). This requires installing libvirt and virt-manager in a rootful Distrobox (apparently Distrobox supports this only for Alma Linux and Tumbleweed, so the default Tumbleweed guest should be okay as long as you can run it with root) and installing the Python application Cassowary ("pip install cassowary") that then "finds" Microsoft Office in the VM and integrates it via FreeRDP so that you can for example click on an XLSX file in Dolphin and it opens in MS Excel running in the VM. Can this approach still work all in a Distrobox? So that basically I click on an XLSX file and it then opens in MS Excel running in the Windows VM in the Distrobox via Cassowary in the Distrobox? There's a lot of layers here, namely: MicroOS -> Distrobox -> [Cassowary + FreeRDP + Virt-Manager + libvirt] -> Windows VM -> MS Office, and I wonder if this would even work.
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New to Manjaro… any advice?
Imo QEMU/KVM has better performance than VirtualBox. There are also some tools like Cassowary to make Windows apps run as if they're native apps (e.g. without opening VM first). It's harder to setup than VirtualBox, though.
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Looking to switch from Windows 11 to Linux. Is anyone running Steam OS on their Desktop or what is the most stable with an Intel/Nvidia build?
If you need to use complex Windows-only programs, use the KVM with GPU passthrough and cassowary. If it's reported to be working fine by the Wine's AppDB, you may want to use wine flatpak.
What are some alternatives?
wsa_pacman - A GUI package manager and package installer for Windows Subsystem for Android (WSA)
winapps - Run Windows apps such as Microsoft Office/Adobe in Linux (Ubuntu/Fedora) and GNOME/KDE as if they were a part of the native OS, including Nautilus integration.
MagiskOnWSA - Magisk and Google Play Services (and more) in WSA [GET https://api.github.com/repos/PeterNjeim/MagiskOnWSA: 403 - Repository access blocked]
quickemu - Quickly create and run optimised Windows, macOS and Linux virtual machines
WSABuilds - Run Windows Subsystem For Android on your Windows 10 and Windows 11 PC using prebuilt binaries with Google Play Store (MindTheGapps) and/or Magisk or KernelSU (root solutions) built in.
proxyscotch - 📡 A simple proxy server created for https://hoppscotch.io
Shizuku - Using system APIs directly with adb/root privileges from normal apps through a Java process started with app_process.
onedrive - OneDrive Client for Linux
smartlife
Vitals - A glimpse into your computer's temperature, voltage, fan speed, memory usage and CPU load.
LSPatch - LSPatch: A non-root Xposed framework extending from LSPosed
GVM - Go Version Manager