Operating-system level virtualization is commonly used in
virtual hosting environments, where it is useful for securely allocating finite hardware resources among a large number of mutually-distrusting users. System administrators may also use it for consolidating server hardware by moving services on separate hosts into containers on the one server. Operating-system level virtualization can also be used to run software created for a certain
Linux distribution on another distribution, an example is
Distrobox. Other typical scenarios include separating several programs to separate containers for improved security, hardware independence, and added resource management features. The improved security provided by the use of a chroot mechanism, however, is not perfect. Operating-system-level virtualization implementations capable of
live migration can also be used for dynamic
load balancing of containers between nodes in a cluster.
Overhead Operating-system level virtualization usually imposes less overhead than
full virtualization because programs in OS-level virtual partitions use the operating system's normal
system call interface and do not need to be subjected to
emulation or be run in an intermediate
virtual machine, as is the case with full virtualization (such as
VMware ESXi,
QEMU, or
Hyper-V) and
paravirtualization (such as
Xen or
User-mode Linux). This form of virtualization also does not require hardware support for efficient performance.
Flexibility Operating-system level virtualization is not as flexible as other virtualization approaches since it cannot host a guest operating system different from the host one, or a different guest kernel. For example, with
Linux, different distributions are fine, but other operating systems such as Windows cannot be hosted. Operating systems using variable input systematics are subject to limitations within the virtualized architecture. Adaptation methods including cloud-server relay analytics maintain the OS-level virtual environment within these applications.
Solaris partially overcomes the limitation described above with its
branded zones feature, which provides the ability to run an environment within a container that emulates an older
Solaris 8 or 9 version in a Solaris 10 host. Linux branded zones (referred to as "lx" branded zones) are also available on
x86-based Solaris systems, providing a complete Linux
user space and support for the execution of Linux applications; additionally, Solaris provides utilities needed to install
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.x or
CentOS 3.x
Linux distributions inside "lx" zones. However, in 2010 Linux branded zones were removed from Solaris; in 2014 they were reintroduced in
Illumos, which is the
open source Solaris fork, supporting 32-bit
Linux kernels.
Storage Some implementations provide file-level
copy-on-write (CoW) mechanisms. (Most commonly, a standard file system is shared between partitions, and those partitions that change the files automatically create their own copies.) This is easier to back up, more space-efficient and simpler to cache than the block-level copy-on-write schemes common on whole-system virtualizers. Whole-system virtualizers, however, can work with non-native file systems and create and roll back snapshots of the entire system state. == Implementations ==