Zones Overview
The Solaris Zones partitioning technology is used to virtualize operating system services and
provide an isolated and secure environment for running applications. A zone is a
virtualized operating system environment created within a single instance of the Solaris Operating System.
When you create a zone, you produce an application execution environment in which
processes are isolated from the rest of the system. This isolation prevents processes
that are running in one zone from monitoring or affecting processes that are
running in other zones. Even a process running with superuser credentials cannot view
or affect activity in other zones.
A zone also provides an abstract layer that separates applications from the physical
attributes of the machine on which they are deployed. Examples of these attributes
include physical device paths.
Zones can be used on any machine that is running the Solaris
10 or later release. The upper limit for the number of zones on
a system is 8192. The number of zones that can be effectively hosted
on a single system is determined by the total resource requirements of the
application software running in all of the zones.
There are two types of non-global zone root file system models: sparse and
whole root. The sparse root zone model optimizes the sharing of objects. The whole root zone model provides
the maximum configurability. These concepts are discussed in Chapter 18, Planning and Configuring Non-Global Zones (Tasks).