:title: Container :description: Definitions of a container :keywords: containers, lxc, concepts, explanation, image, container .. _container_def: Container ========= .. image:: images/docker-filesystems-busyboxrw.png Once you start a process in Docker from an :ref:`image_def`, Docker fetches the image and its :ref:`parent_image_def`, and repeats the process until it reaches the :ref:`base_image_def`. Then the :ref:`ufs_def` adds a read-write layer on top. That read-write layer, plus the information about its :ref:`parent_image_def` and some additional information like its unique id, networking configuration, and resource limits is called a **container**. .. _container_state_def: Container State ............... Containers can change, and so they have state. A container may be **running** or **exited**. When a container is running, the idea of a "container" also includes a tree of processes running on the CPU, isolated from the other processes running on the host. When the container is exited, the state of the file system and its exit value is preserved. You can start, stop, and restart a container. The processes restart from scratch (their memory state is **not** preserved in a container), but the file system is just as it was when the container was stopped. You can promote a container to an :ref:`image_def` with ``docker commit``. Once a container is an image, you can use it as a parent for new containers.