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moby--moby/docs/sources/terms/filesystem.rst

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:title: File Systems
:description: How Linux organizes its persistent storage
:keywords: containers, files, linux
.. _filesystem_def:
File System
===========
.. image:: images/docker-filesystems-generic.png
In order for a Linux system to run, it typically needs two `file
systems <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem>`_:
1. boot file system (bootfs)
2. root file system (rootfs)
The **boot file system** contains the bootloader and the kernel. The
user never makes any changes to the boot file system. In fact, soon
after the boot process is complete, the entire kernel is in memory,
and the boot file system is unmounted to free up the RAM associated
with the initrd disk image.
The **root file system** includes the typical directory structure we
associate with Unix-like operating systems: ``/dev, /proc, /bin, /etc,
/lib, /usr,`` and ``/tmp`` plus all the configuration files, binaries
and libraries required to run user applications (like bash, ls, and so
forth).
While there can be important kernel differences between different
Linux distributions, the contents and organization of the root file
system are usually what make your software packages dependent on one
distribution versus another. Docker can help solve this problem by
running multiple distributions at the same time.
.. image:: images/docker-filesystems-multiroot.png