ACS Documentation : ACS Core Architecture Guide : Bootstrapping ACS
/web/yourservername/tcl), sourcing each file in sequence.
While this overall structure for initialization is still intact, package management has thrown a wrench into the works - there are a few extra things to do during initialization, most notably:
/packages directory for new packages.*-procs.tcl and *-init.tcl files.nsd daemon is executed by the init process (or otherwise), AOLserver reads its configuration file and chroots itself if necessary. It then loads shared libraries indicated in the .ini file (e.g., the Oracle driver and nssock), and sources Tcl module files (generally in /home/aol30/modules/tcl). This step is, and has always been, the same for all AOLservers, regardless of whether they are running ACS.
Next AOLserver sources, in lexicographical order, each file in the /tcl directory. The first such file is 0-acs-init.tcl, which doesn't do much directly except to determine the ACS path root (e.g., /web/yourservername) by trimming the final component from the path to the Tcl library directory (/web/yourservername/tcl). But 0-acs-init.tcl's has an important function, namely sourcing /packages/acs-core/bootstrap.tcl, which does the following:
/packages/acs-core/apm-procs.tcl - no need to worry about them unless you're an ACS core hacker.
/tcl directory has evolved quite a bit over the months and years, and a few files have come and gone. The /www/doc/removed-files.txt file contains a list of files which must be deleted from the AOLserver installation, at the risk of causing weird conflicts, e.g., having several security filters registered. bootstrap.tcl scans through this list, logging error messages to the log if any of these files exist.
*-procs.tcl files in the ACS core. We source each file matching the *-procs.tcl glob in the /packages/acs-core directory, in lexicographical order. These procedure are needed to perform any of the following steps.
/packages directory. In each directory inside /packages, we look for a .info file; if we find a package that hasn't yet been registered with the package manager (i.e., it's been copied there manually), we insert information about it into the database. (The first time ACS starts up, no packages will have been registered in the database yet, so this step will registers every single package in the /packages directory.) Note that packages discovered here are initially disabled; they must be manually enabled in the package manager before they can be used.
acs-core package is enabled. If the ACS core isn't initialized, the server couldn't possibly be operational, so if there's no enabled version of the ACS core we simply mark the latest installed one as enabled.
*-procs.tcl files for enabled packages, activating their APIs.
*-init.tcl files for enabled packages, giving packages a chance to register filters and procedures, initialize data structures, etc.
bootstrap.tcl is done executing. AOLserver proceeds to source the remaining files in the /tcl directory (i.e., unpackaged libraries) and begins listening for connections.