Verb
chroot (third-person singular simple present chroots, present participle chrooting, simple past and past participle chrooted)
(computing, Unix) To change the apparent root directory for a running process, affecting whether or not it can access certain files etc.
This allows Docker to take advantage of the numerous isolation tools available, each with their particular tradeoffs and install base: OpenVZ, systemd-nspawn, libvirt-lxc, libvirt-sandbox, qemu/kvm, BSD Jails, Solaris Zones, and even good old chroot. Source: Internet
In chroot does not started the logger. Source: Internet
I had to build from within an Ubuntu 7.10 chroot to get it to work. Source: Internet
So I have a 64-bit Linux Mint 17 system and I am trying to set up a chroot environment with a 64-bit Ubuntu 12.04-based system (actually something called Vinux, an Ubuntu remix). Source: Internet
This document explains the basic concepts surrounding the use of a and provides instructions for getting a basic chroot up and running. Source: Internet
This is a repository of scripts that enable common hardware debug tasks outside of a Chromium chroot. Source: Internet