Docker Engine provides the core Docker technology that enables images and
containers. As the last step in your installation, you ran the
docker run hello-world
command. The command you ran had three parts.
An image is a filesystem and parameters to use at runtime. It doesn’t have state and never changes. A container is a running instance of an image. When you ran the command, Docker Engine:
hello-world
software imageDepending on how it was built, an image might run a simple, single command and
then exit. This is what hello-world
did.
A Docker image, though, is capable of much more. An image can start software as complex as a database, wait for you (or someone else) to add data, store the data for later use, and then wait for the next person.
Who built the hello-world
software image though? In this case, Docker did but
anyone can. Docker Engine lets people (or companies) create and share software
through Docker images. Using Docker Engine, you don’t have to worry about
whether your computer can run the software in a Docker image — a Docker
container can always run it.
See, that was quick wasn’t it? Now, you are ready to do some really fun stuff with Docker. Go on to the next part to find and run the whalesay image.