Yes, technically chroot and jails are wrappers around kernel namespaces / cgroups and so is docker.
But containers were born in a post chroot era as an attempt at making the same functionality much more user friendly and focused more on bundling cgroups and namespaces into a single superset, where chroot on its own is only namespaces. This is super visible in early docker where you could not individually dial those settings. It’s still a useful way to explain containers in general in the sense that comparing two similar things helps you define both of them.
Also cgroups have evolved alongside containers at this point and work rather differently now compared to 18 years ago when cgroups were invented and this differentiation mattered more than now. We’re at the point where differentiation between VMs and Containers is getting really hard since both more and more often rely on the same kernel features that were developed in recent years on top of cgroups
Yes, technically chroot and jails are wrappers around kernel namespaces / cgroups and so is docker.
But containers were born in a post chroot era as an attempt at making the same functionality much more user friendly and focused more on bundling cgroups and namespaces into a single superset, where chroot on its own is only namespaces. This is super visible in early docker where you could not individually dial those settings. It’s still a useful way to explain containers in general in the sense that comparing two similar things helps you define both of them.
Also cgroups have evolved alongside containers at this point and work rather differently now compared to 18 years ago when cgroups were invented and this differentiation mattered more than now. We’re at the point where differentiation between VMs and Containers is getting really hard since both more and more often rely on the same kernel features that were developed in recent years on top of cgroups