Ankaj Gupta
November 19, 2025

Docker Overview - From Operating Systems to Containers

Docker Overview: From Operating Systems to Containers

A comprehensive guide to understanding Docker, containerization, and the evolution of application deployment

Published: 15 min read

Modern software applications require consistent environments to run reliably. Over the decades, computing evolved from simple operating systems, to virtual machines (VMs), and then to containers—a lightweight form of OS-level virtualization. Containers became popular after 2013 with the introduction of Docker, enabling developers to package applications and their dependencies into portable units.

๐Ÿ“š What You'll Learn

  • How operating systems work (Kernel & Shell)
  • Evolution from bare-metal apps → virtual machines → containers
  • How Docker works internally
  • Visual diagrams and comparisons
  • VM vs Container detailed comparison
  • Example containerized application structure

1. Operating System Architecture

Every operating system contains two main components that work together to manage hardware resources and provide an interface for users and applications.

⚙️ Kernel (Core of OS)

  • Manages hardware resources (CPU, RAM, Disk, Network)
  • Handles system calls from applications
  • Provides security, process management, memory management
  • Examples: Linux Kernel, Windows NT Kernel

๐Ÿ’ป Shell (Interface)

  • Command-line (CLI) or graphical (GUI) interface
  • Sends user commands to the Kernel
  • Acts as a bridge between user and OS
  • Examples: Bash, PowerShell, CMD, zsh

System Flow Diagram

๐Ÿ‘ค User
๐Ÿ’ป Shell
⚙️ Kernel
๐Ÿ–ฅ️ Hardware

2. Evolution of Application Deployment

The way we deploy applications has evolved significantly over time. Let's explore the journey from traditional deployment to modern containerization.

2.1 Before 2000: Traditional Deployment

Applications ran directly on the operating system with no isolation between different applications.

๐Ÿ“ฑ Application
☕ Runtime (JRE, .NET, etc.)
๐Ÿ’ป Operating System
๐Ÿ–ฅ️ Hardware

⚠️ Limitations

  • Conflicts between application dependencies
  • Hard to scale horizontally
  • Difficult to maintain consistency across servers
  • A crash in one app could impact others

2.2 After 2000: Virtual Machines (VMs)

Virtualization introduced multiple OS instances on one hardware using a Hypervisor.

๐Ÿ–ฅ️ Hardware
๐Ÿ”ง Hypervisor
VM-1
Guest OS
Runtime
App-A
VM-2
Guest OS
Runtime
App-B
VM-3
Guest OS
Runtime
App-C

✅ Advantages

  • Full isolation between applications
  • Can run different OS types on same hardware
  • Stable and secure

⚠️ Disadvantages

  • Heavy (Each VM includes a full OS)
  • Slow boot time (minutes)
  • Consumes large memory & CPU
  • Inefficient for microservices

2.3 After 2013: Containers (Docker)

Containers are lightweight, fast, and share the host OS kernel, eliminating the need for multiple full OS installations.

๐Ÿ“ฆ Key Definition

A container is a lightweight, standalone, executable unit of software that includes application code and all dependencies, but shares the host OS kernel.

Operating System Support

Host OS Virtualization Used Container Runtime
Windows 10 Hyper-V Lightweight Linux VM
Windows 11 WSL2 Lightweight Linux VM
Linux Native support No VM needed

Container Architecture (Docker)

๐Ÿ–ฅ️ Hardware
⚙️ Host OS Kernel
๐Ÿณ Docker Engine
Container 1
Runtime
App-1
Container 2
Runtime
App-2
Container 3
Runtime
App-3

✨ Why Containers are Lightweight

  • No Guest OS per container
  • All containers share Host OS kernel
  • Very fast startup (milliseconds vs minutes)
  • Minimal resource overhead

3. Virtual Machine vs Container: Detailed Comparison

Virtual Machine Architecture

App-A / App-B / App-C
Guest OS (per VM)
Hypervisor
Hardware

Container Architecture

App-1 / App-2 / App-3
Runtime (per container)
Docker Engine
Host OS (shared)
Hardware

Feature Comparison

Feature Virtual Machines Containers
OS per unit Yes (Full Guest OS) No (Shared host kernel)
Weight Heavy (GBs) Lightweight (MBs)
Boot time Minutes Seconds / Milliseconds
Isolation Strong (Full OS isolation) Medium-strong (Process isolation)
Resource usage High Low
Portability Medium High
Ideal for Full OS virtualization, legacy apps Microservices, CI/CD, modern apps
Scaling Slower, resource-intensive Fast, efficient

✅ Container Advantages

  • Lightweight and fast startup
  • Sharing host OS kernel reduces overhead
  • Perfect for microservices architecture
  • Easy horizontal scaling
  • Consistent across development, staging, and production

⚠️ Container Limitations

  • Cannot run a different OS kernel (e.g., Windows containers on Linux require special support)
  • Slightly less isolated than full VMs
  • Security concerns if kernel is compromised

4. Containerized Application Structure Example

Here's how multiple applications run in containers on a single Docker host, each with its own runtime and dependencies.

๐Ÿ–ฅ️ Docker Host / Hardware Infrastructure
๐Ÿ’ป Host Operating System
๐Ÿณ Docker Engine
Container 1 (C1)
๐Ÿ“ฑ App-1
Java Application
☕ Runtime
JRE (Java Runtime)
๐Ÿ“ฆ Container Shell
User Space
Container 2 (C2)
๐Ÿ“ฑ App-2
.NET Application
⚙️ Runtime
.NET Runtime
๐Ÿ“ฆ Container Shell
User Space
Container 3 (C3)
๐Ÿ“ฑ App-3
Python Application
๐Ÿ Runtime
Python Interpreter
๐Ÿ“ฆ Container Shell
User Space

๐Ÿ’ก Key Takeaways

  • Each container runs independently with its own runtime environment
  • All containers share the same host OS kernel through Docker Engine
  • Different applications can use different runtimes (Java, .NET, Python) simultaneously
  • Containers are isolated at the process level, not OS level

5. Why Docker?

๐ŸŽฏ Core Benefits

  • Consistency: Your application runs the same way across development, testing, and production environments.
  • Fast Deployment: Containers start in milliseconds, enabling rapid scaling and deployment.
  • Easy Packaging: Dockerfile and Images make it simple to package applications with all dependencies.
  • Portability: Containers can run on any system that supports Docker, regardless of the underlying infrastructure.
  • Efficient Resource Usage: Containers share the OS kernel, using fewer resources than virtual machines.

๐Ÿš€ Use Cases

  • Microservices Architecture: Deploy and scale individual services independently.
  • CI/CD Pipelines: Consistent build and test environments for continuous integration.
  • Development Environments: Quick setup of complex development stacks.
  • Cloud-Native Applications: Build applications designed for cloud deployment.
  • Multi-Cloud Deployment: Deploy the same container across different cloud providers.

6. Summary

Evolution Timeline

Before 2000
Traditional Deployment - Direct OS installation
After 2000
Virtual Machines - Full OS virtualization with Hypervisor
After 2013
Containers (Docker) - Lightweight OS-level virtualization

Key Differences at a Glance

Aspect Virtual Machines Containers
OS per unit Yes No (shared host kernel)
Weight Heavy Lightweight
Boot time Minutes Seconds / milliseconds
Isolation Strong Medium-strong
Ideal for Full OS virtualization Microservices, CI/CD

7. Conclusion

Docker has revolutionized how we develop, ship, and run applications. By understanding the evolution from traditional deployment to virtual machines and finally to containers, we can appreciate the efficiency and portability that Docker brings to modern software development.

Containers offer the perfect balance between isolation and resource efficiency, making them ideal for microservices architectures, CI/CD pipelines, and cloud-native applications. As you continue your Docker journey, explore Docker Compose for multi-container applications and orchestration tools like Kubernetes for managing containerized applications at scale.

Ready to Start Containerizing?

Begin your Docker journey today and experience the power of containerization. Start with simple containers, experiment with Dockerfiles, and build scalable applications.

Devops Docker Operating Systems

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