Difference between revisions of "Container (virtualization)"

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* 2012 OpenShift Origin the open source codebase used in the OpenShift PaaS released<ref>https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/Announcing-OpenShift-Origin-Open-Source-Code-For-Platform-as-a-Service?source=author&term=2661</ref>
 
* 2012 OpenShift Origin the open source codebase used in the OpenShift PaaS released<ref>https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/Announcing-OpenShift-Origin-Open-Source-Code-For-Platform-as-a-Service?source=author&term=2661</ref>
 
* 2011 [[Openshift]] platform is launched based on Linux containers<ref>https://blog.openshift.com/red-hat-chose-kubernetes-openshift/</ref>
 
* 2011 [[Openshift]] platform is launched based on Linux containers<ref>https://blog.openshift.com/red-hat-chose-kubernetes-openshift/</ref>
* 2013 [[Container Linux]]
+
* 2013 [[Container Linux]] ([[CoreOS]])
 
* 2013 [[Docker]] launched
 
* 2013 [[Docker]] launched
 
* 06/2014 [[Kubernetes]] launched
 
* 06/2014 [[Kubernetes]] launched

Revision as of 17:58, 8 March 2020

Linux Container virtualization is an os-level virtualization technology based in Linux kernel cgroups and namespaces features. Docker containers are available since 2013 and runC was first released in July 2015 as version 0.0.1[1].

Containers:

Containers Technology Timeline

Tools

containerd

containerd[6][7] is an industry-standard container runtime.

Activities

  1. Understand the differences between runc[8], containerd[9] and docker. https://medium.com/@alenkacz/whats-the-difference-between-runc-containerd-docker-3fc8f79d4d6e

See also

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