# FAQ Please open an issue if you want to add a question here. ## How do updates work? LinuxKit does not require being installed on a disk, it is often run from an ISO, PXE or other such means, so it does not require an on disk upgrade method such as the ChromeOS code that is often used. It would definitely be possible to use that type of upgrade method if the system is installed, and it would be useful to support this for that use case, and an updater container to control this for people who want to use this. We generally use external tooling such as [Infrakit](https://github.com/docker/infrakit) or CloudFormation templates to manage the update process externally from LinuxKit, including doing rolling cluster upgrades to make sure distributed applications stay up and responsive. Updates may preserve the state disk used by applications if needed, either on the same physical node, or by reattaching a virtual cloud volume to a new node. ## What do I need to build LinuxKit? We have tried to make this as simple as possible, by using containers for the build process, so you should be able to build LinuxKit on any OSX or Linux laptop; we should have Windows build support soon. ## Why not use `systemd`? In order to keep the system minimal, `systemd` did not seem appropriate, as it brings in a lot of dependencies and functionality that we do not need. At present we are using the `busybox` `init` process, and a small set of minimal scripts, but we expect to replace that with a small standalone `init` process and a small piece of code to bring up the system containers where the real work takes place. ## Console not displaying init or containerd output at boot If you're not seeing `containerd` logs in the console during boot, make sure that your kernel `cmdline` configuration doesn't list multiple consoles. `init` and other processes like `containerd` will use the last defined console in the kernel `cmdline`. When using `qemu`, to see the console you need to list `ttyS0` as the last console to properly see the output. ## Troubleshooting containers Linuxkit runs all services in a specific `containerd` namespace called `services.linuxkit`. To list all the defined containers: ```sh (ns: getty) linuxkit-befde23bc535:~# ctr -n services.linuxkit container ls CONTAINER IMAGE RUNTIME getty - io.containerd.runtime.v1.linux ``` To list all running containers and their status: ```sh (ns: getty) linuxkit-befde23bc535:~# ctr -n services.linuxkit task ls TASK PID STATUS getty 661 RUNNING ``` To list all processes running in a container: ```sh (ns: getty) linuxkit-befde23bc535:/containers/services/getty# ctr -n services.linuxkit task ps getty PID INFO 661 &ProcessDetails{ExecID:getty,} 677 - 685 - 686 - 687 - 1237 - ``` To attach a shell to a running container: ```sh (ns: getty) linuxkit-befde23bc535:/containers/services/getty# ctr -n services.linuxkit tasks exec --tty --exec-id sh sshd /bin/ash -l (ns: sshd) linuxkit-befde23bc535:/# ``` Containers are defined as OCI bundles in `/containers`.