Any software engineer would have his/her mind blown when somebody dose all of that stuff as simple as that for the first: 1. generate an LXCContainer 2. allocate new file system ("ALLOCATE NEW FREAKING FILE SYSTEM") 3. mount a rewrite layer 4. allocate a network interface 5. set an IP for it 6. setup NAT 7. execute a process in there and capture the output
10 Years back this day made history and created lot of change in the way the Datacenters works; We can also say that this day was marked as end of VM virtualization.
Letting him finish that sentence would mean death to others I suppose. :/ I hate these time constrains. I hope you folks put up a bit in-depth demo of this interesting tool!
What a shame that he was not allowed to speak more than couple of minutes.... He was doing such a historical presentation... Now I am wondering what the other guys would have spoken about if he got such less time... !!!!!
We had cgroups and namespaces in kernel for years. It wasn't scripted, but people could use C just fine. Suddenly it's popular and everyone is making tools around it, docker, libvirt-lxc,... and they all label it as something new.
'nobody knew' what cgroups and namespaces were going to be really good for -- except maybe the ten people who wrote the kernel internals. It took Docker to show what is possible. Docker is maybe something like the mouse or trackball? The LASER printer? Color film? World changing, at any rate.
Also, the shots of the near-totally slothic audience, all larduous and laying back 45 degrees in their too-small chairs, too-tight shirts ... ugh. What has computer "geek" become?
This video should go into computer history museum
Wow
Indeed.
after years, you are watching history of docker. this is awesome!
Any software engineer would have his/her mind blown when somebody dose all of that stuff as simple as that for the first:
1. generate an LXCContainer
2. allocate new file system ("ALLOCATE NEW FREAKING FILE SYSTEM")
3. mount a rewrite layer
4. allocate a network interface
5. set an IP for it
6. setup NAT
7. execute a process in there and capture the output
Kids of today, don't know how good they've got it
Docker is makign all this way more complicated.
10 Years back this day made history and created lot of change in the way the Datacenters works; We can also say that this day was marked as end of VM virtualization.
I wonder, if they had had any idea of how Docker would reshape the landscape of the internet, would they have let him talk a little longer?
if they had any idea?
they would have invited him as a key speaker for the opening. 😅
wow ! watching this after 8 years still feeling the thrills of this talk !!! ⚡😃
What a history, he wrote a legendary moment in 5 minutes and then,,,,,,,,, "IM DONE!". Y'all are legend
siz adama 5 dakikayı çok görürseniz adam aleti elinize böyle verir.
This changed Continuous Integration / Continuous Delivery, and fed the explosion of micro VM instances.
Amazing one concept and such a huge impact on how the industry runs!!!
that one guy that didn't even clap wen he blew everyone's mind
The demo that started all the mayhem.
Next to Linux, Docker is the single Second Most Important thing I run on hundreds of machines.
He wrote a history in 5 mins. Pity that he didnt get more time :(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaand docker was born :)
Concise talk on container and thanks for the product that made history.
Great talk. Pity you didn't have more time. Great software.
humble beginnings
Epoch making moment and they probably never knew it
in 5 minutes he changed the future
Techies - the underdogs of the IT world. Name is lost somewhere in the history. Nevertheless, thank you Solomon.
starting point of the legend.
That host did not realize he is the first bad person in the history of docker XD XD
Thank you Sullivan :D
@1:53 the trajectory of computing changed forever
The guy that ended thing early... no idea of the kind of people he shouted off
Letting him finish that sentence would mean death to others I suppose. :/ I hate these time constrains. I hope you folks put up a bit in-depth demo of this interesting tool!
This is the beginning of the Cloud Native in the world
Solomon sana teşekkür etmeye geldim knk, thx.
In reality Docke is like: It will NOT run at all.
wow! that was rough! do that to him today HAHAHAHA
The most important thing to happen in computers since computers. Totally eclipses python. The utter bewilderment in the room is palpable.
History has eye on you 👀
How does this compare to OpenVZ?
After all, isn't LXC mostly built by its authors?
legends video. i think this video is worthier than that steve jobs presenting iphone first time
Wow....wish this was 50mins!!
Would it hurt to give the guy a few seconds to finish?
Adamlar şimdi bu videoyu izleyip büyük pişmanlık içindedir. :)
What a shame that he was not allowed to speak more than couple of minutes.... He was doing such a historical presentation...
Now I am wondering what the other guys would have spoken about if he got such less time... !!!!!
This is thristy as hell.
We had cgroups and namespaces in kernel for years. It wasn't scripted, but people could use C just fine. Suddenly it's popular and everyone is making tools around it, docker, libvirt-lxc,... and they all label it as something new.
Just like virtualization exist in mainframe for decades....
Ztevoz Milloz
And when did you ever pick up code from one mainframe and dump it into another and it just worked?
The tech existed yes, but the magic is in tying it all together in a usable solution.
'nobody knew' what cgroups and namespaces were going to be really good for -- except maybe the ten people who wrote the kernel internals. It took Docker to show what is possible. Docker is maybe something like the mouse or trackball? The LASER printer? Color film? World changing, at any rate.
Docker 的开端吗
Docker !!!!
Nice !
hello wowlrd
朝聖
Nice
docker.io
I can't speak so fast Turkish as this that He is talking english. I hardly understood what he was talking.
That's why I watched the video slowmotion. (0.75x) :))
Also, the shots of the near-totally slothic audience, all larduous and laying back 45 degrees in their too-small chairs, too-tight shirts ... ugh. What has computer "geek" become?