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I'm not certain that I'm asking the right question... but while I have been reading everything docker that I can get my hands on I see that I can install Docker on Ubuntu 12.04 (for example) and then I can install a Fedora container or a different version of ubuntu? (there is an example where the user installed busybox in the container.)

And of course I could be completely wrong.

But it would be my expectation that there was a ephemeral connection between the base system and the container.

restated: what is the relationship between the host OS and the container base image's OS?

3 Answers 3

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As mentioned by BraveNewCurrency, the only relationship between the host OS and the container is the Kernel.

It is one of the main difference between docker and 'regular' virtual machines, there is no overhead, everything takes place directly within the host's kernel.

This is why you can run only Linux based distribution/binaries within the container. If you want to run something else, it is not impossible, but you would need some kind of virtualization within the container (qemu, kvm, etc.)

Docker manage images that are the file system representation. You can install any linux distribution or simply put binaries.

Indeed, for the convenience of the example, we often rely on the base images, but you could also create your image without any of the distribution libraries/binaries. That way you would have a really tiny yet functional container.

One more point regarding the distributions: as the kernel is still the kernel of the host, you will not have any specific kernel module/patches provided by the distribution.

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  • 2
    so if the host OS is Ubuntu then the container is going to be Ubuntu too?
    – Richard
    Sep 18, 2013 at 5:12
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    The container's kernel is going to be the one from ubuntu, but nothing more. You can run easily centos, archlinux, debian or any other linux based distribution as containers.
    – creack
    Sep 18, 2013 at 17:15
  • 40
    Although this information may be stated directly/indirectly on the docker website, I really feel they should make this a bit clearer. I had worked my way through the homepage, overview, the interactive tutorial, and most of the basic tuts. Despite this I was confused on this topic, and was starting to assume that the best performance from docker (based on the architecture diagrams from the site) would require a match on the host and container OS. I am new to the concept of the "linux kernel" so this was not immediately obvious to me. Knowing this instantly makes docker double as bad-ass.
    – ctrlplusb
    Oct 19, 2014 at 9:03
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    This seems to indicate that only the user-space parts of an OS (libraries, commands, applications) can be containerized. If the application requires a different kernel revision (e.g. 3.10 vs. 4.9) then it may not be able to run in a container. Is that right?
    – David C.
    Jul 13, 2017 at 16:25
  • 4
    That is correct. However, you can containerize an actual virtual machine (e.g. qemu) and run any kernel there.
    – creack
    Jul 13, 2017 at 16:52
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Literally, the only thing they have in common is the kernel. Their whole world (file system) is in the docker container.

1

There is another consideration - even if the both kernels are the same, there is a problem if the host OS does not support Docker, like RHEL 6: https://access.redhat.com/solutions/1378023

So you won't be able to spin up a container on RHEL 6, even if the image is a Linux one.

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