In computing, cgroups (control groups) are a Linux kernel feature that limits, accounts for, and isolates resource usage—CPU, memory, I/O—for process groups. System administrators use them to enforce fair resource allocation, prevent one process from starving others. Container runtimes like Docker rely on cgroups to ensure performance isolation, benefiting cloud providers, developers, and enterprises running multi-tenant systems.
Get alerts when this topic surges in newsletters. Free to start.
Sign up freeExplore more trends:Trending Topics ·AI Trends ·Business Trends ·Finance Trends ·Technology Trends