If the VM is a Linux, you can do this without any problem – on Linux, the Docker is essentially a well-worked chroot. Thus, the Linux docker is not virtualization.
In the case of Windows, it is not so easy. Windows Docker internally uses Hyper-V to emulate the containers. Which means that you can only run, if you can use nested virtualization:
- On your host machine runs a Windows VM
- Inside your Windows VM, runs a HyperV
- HyperV is managed by the docker installed on your virtual Windows.
I tried qemu/kvm, virtualbox and vmware player. I configured them deeply and strongly, I’ve hacked them, I did every possible to do. Only the last worked (VMWare).
There are significant speed costs, but it may be useful for development on Linux, and then trial-test on Windows configurations.
You will need a lot of ram. At least 16G. 32G is better. A relative useful configuration would be:
- 32GB physical RAM for the physical host
- 12GB virtual RAM for the Windows VM running on it
- 8GB virtual RAM inside the Windows VM for the HyperV Linux host.
Sometimes it will be a little bit buggy, but only your HyperV will crash out, your virtual Win, or your host machine won’t. It is okay for testing a docker container on a Windows machine, what you’ve developed on a Linux. Don’t create mission critical servers on this way. 🙂