Mounting an SMB server share should be straightforward, I tested this on Windows build 1909 and WSL 2.0 Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 4.19.128-microsoft-standard x86_64). You use mount just as usual:
sudo mount -t drvfs '\\server\share' /your/mount/folder
Nothing too hard, the source path of the mount is the regular UNC pathname. The important bits are the file system type ("drive filesystem"?) and the fact that you need to enclose the server path in single quotes (on the command line). As usual, your mount folder must also exist.
On this WSL issue I found good options (-o) that seem to work very well with creating, reading and writing files without sudo as well as reading correct modification/creation dates:
metadata,rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=22,fmask=11
Because I like to have this server mounted always, I put the mount instruction into /etc/fstab
to have it auto-mounted by WSL:
\\server\share /your/mount/folder drvfs metadata,rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=22,fmask=11 0 0
(you can reload fstab with sudo mount -a
)
Note that I have logged into the server on Windows itself and made it remember the user and password. @David C. Rankin's answer has some info on how to specify username and password if you need to do it separately.