difference between cgroups and namespaces
cgroups limits the resources which a process or set of processes can use these resources could be CPU,Memory,Network I/O or access to filesystem while namespace restrict the visibility of group of processes to the rest of the system.
visit for further details How Linux Kernel Cgroups And Namespaces Made Modern Containers Possible
The proper links for those two notions have been fixed in PR 14307:
Under the hood, Docker is built on the following components:
The cgroups and
namespaces
capabilities of the Linux kernel
With:
- cgroup: Control Groups provide a mechanism for aggregating/partitioning sets of tasks, and all their future children, into hierarchical groups with specialized behaviour.
- namespace: wraps a global system resource in an abstraction that makes it appear to the processes within the namespace that they have their own isolated instance of the global resource.
In short:
- Cgroups = limits how much you can use;
- namespaces = limits what you can see (and therefore use)
See more at "Anatomy of a Container: Namespaces, cgroups & Some Filesystem Magic" by Jérôme Petazzoni.
Cgroups involve resource metering and limiting:
- memory
- CPU
- block I/O
- network
Namespaces provide processes with their own view of the system
Multiple namespaces:
- pid
- net
- mnt
- uts
- ipc
- user: userns it is graduating from experimental in docker 1.10
(per-daemon-instance remapping of container root to an unprivileged user is in progress: PR 12648: see its design)