container_administrator

Container Administrator

Return to Container Security, Containerization, CloudOps (Cloud Management), Kubernetes Admin, Red Hat Kubernetes OpenShift Administrator, Container Admin, Cloud Admin (AWS Admin, Azure Admin, GCP Admin), Red Hat Certified System Administrator (RHCSA), Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE - Ansible), SysAdmin, Linux Admin (Linux Management), Windows Admin (Windows Server Management), ServerAdmin, NetAdmin (Network management)

Docker Administrator

ContainerAdmin - Container Admin - Container-Admin

Container Administrator

Container Administrators

Container Administration

Containers Administrator

Containers Administrators

Containers Administration

Snippet from Wikipedia: OS-level virtualization

OS-level virtualization is an operating system (OS) virtualization paradigm in which the kernel allows the existence of multiple isolated user space instances, including containers (LXC, Solaris Containers, AIX WPARs, HP-UX SRP Containers, Docker, Podman), zones (Solaris Containers), virtual private servers (OpenVZ), partitions, virtual environments (VEs), virtual kernels (DragonFly BSD), and jails (FreeBSD jail and chroot). Such instances may look like real computers from the point of view of programs running in them. A computer program running on an ordinary operating system can see all resources (connected devices, files and folders, network shares, CPU power, quantifiable hardware capabilities) of that computer. Programs running inside a container can only see the container's contents and devices assigned to the container.

On Unix-like operating systems, this feature can be seen as an advanced implementation of the standard chroot mechanism, which changes the apparent root folder for the current running process and its children. In addition to isolation mechanisms, the kernel often provides resource-management features to limit the impact of one container's activities on other containers. Linux containers are all based on the virtualization, isolation, and resource management mechanisms provided by the Linux kernel, notably Linux namespaces and cgroups.

Although the word container most commonly refers to OS-level virtualization, it is sometimes used to refer to fuller virtual machines operating in varying degrees of concert with the host OS, such as Microsoft's Hyper-V containers. For an overview of virtualization since 1960, see Timeline of virtualization technologies.

container_administrator.txt · Last modified: 2024/05/01 04:17 by 127.0.0.1

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