Help developers discover the tools you use. Get visibility for your team's tech choices and contribute to the community's knowledge.
It combines the capabilities you get from a lightweight container OS, optimized to deliver containers, with the robust security, networking and storage capabilities you’ve come to expect and depend on from a hardware hypervisor. | It is a next-generation system container and virtual machine manager. It offers a unified user experience around full Linux systems running inside containers or virtual machines. It is image-based and provides images for a wide number of Linux distributions. |
Secure containers;Full isolation per container in a multi-tenant environment;Built-in networking;Secure, isolated, resizable filesystems for each container;The speed of bare metal performance + the flexibility of virtualization | Secure by design through unprivileged containers, resource restrictions, authentication, and more;
Simple, clear API and crisp command line experience;
Scalable;
Event-based;
Remote usage |
Statistics | |
GitHub Stars - | GitHub Stars 4.3K |
GitHub Forks - | GitHub Forks 363 |
Stacks 9 | Stacks 1 |
Followers 10 | Followers 2 |
Votes 0 | Votes 0 |
Integrations | |
| No integrations available | |

The Docker Platform is the industry-leading container platform for continuous, high-velocity innovation, enabling organizations to seamlessly build and share any application — from legacy to what comes next — and securely run them anywhere

LXD isn't a rewrite of LXC, in fact it's building on top of LXC to provide a new, better user experience. Under the hood, LXD uses LXC through liblxc and its Go binding to create and manage the containers. It's basically an alternative to LXC's tools and distribution template system with the added features that come from being controllable over the network.

LXC is a userspace interface for the Linux kernel containment features. Through a powerful API and simple tools, it lets Linux users easily create and manage system or application containers.

Rocket is a cli for running App Containers. The goal of rocket is to be composable, secure, and fast.

Vagrant Cloud pairs with Vagrant to enable access, insight and collaboration across teams, as well as to bring exposure to community contributions and development environments.

300,000+ OpenClaw instances are currently exposed on the public internet (Shodan: port 18789). Most self-hosted setups miss the tunnel, skip the required flags, share containers. When your agent processes untrusted input and holds access to your accounts, that gap matters. Vessel provides private, dedicated hosting for OpenClaw agents. Each agent runs on its own GCP e2-standard-2 VM, its own kernel, its own disk, no shared memory with other tenants. No public IP. No port 18789 exposure. All traffic routes through an encrypted Cloudflare Tunnel. Secrets are managed separately from the runtime. Provision from a web dashboard, connect to Slack, Discord, or WhatsApp, and destroy when done. Your agent's data stays on your VM, your own Vessel.

It's the only MongoDB tool that provides three ways to explore data alongside powerful features like query autocompletion, polyglot code generation, a stage-by-stage aggregation query builder, import and export, SQL query support and more.

Virtuozzo leverages OpenVZ as its core of a virtualization solution offered by Virtuozzo company. Virtuozzo is optimized for hosters and offers hypervisor (VMs in addition to containers), distributed cloud storage, dedicated support, management tools, and easy installation.

We set out to build Clear Containers by leveraging the isolation of virtual-machine technology along with the deployment benefits of containers. As part of this, we let go of the "generic PC hardware" notion traditionally associated with virtual machines; we're not going to pretend to be a standard PC that is compatible with just about any OS on the planet.

It is a next-generation technology for building and distributing desktop applications on Linux