TiddlyWiki5 is based on a 1,000 line boot kernel that runs on node.js or in the browser, with all other functionality added via dynamically loaded modules.
The kernel boots just enough of the TiddlyWiki environment to allow it to load tiddlers and execute JavaScript modules. Plugin modules are written like `node.js` modules.
There are many [[different types of module|ModuleType]]: parsers, serializers, deserializers, macros etc. It goes much further than you might expect. For example, individual tiddler fields are modules, too: there's a module that knows how to handle the `tags` field, and another that knows how to handle the special behaviour of the `modified` and `created` fields.
In TiddlyWiki5, [[Plugins]] are bundles of tiddlers that are distributed and managed as one; [[Modules]] are JavaScript tiddlers with a module type identifying when and how they should be executed.
The tiddler [[$:/core/boot.js]] is a barebones TiddlyWiki kernel that is just sufficient to load the core plugin modules and trigger a startup module to load up the rest of the application.
* Code for the browser to load tiddlers from the HTML DOM
* Code for the server to load tiddlers from the file system
Each module is an ordinary `node.js`-style module, using the `require()` function to access other modules and the `exports` global to return JavaScript values. The boot kernel smooths over the differences between `node.js` and the browser, allowing the same plugin modules to execute in both environments.
In the browser, `core/boot.js` is packed into a template HTML file that contains the following elements in order:
* Ordinary and shadow tiddlers, packed as HTML `<DIV>` elements
* `core/bootprefix.js`, containing a few lines to set up the plugin environment
On the server, `core/boot.js` is executed directly. It uses the `node.js` local file API to load plugins directly from the file system in the `core/modules` directory. The code loading is performed synchronously for brevity (and because the system is in any case inherently blocked until plugins are loaded).
The boot kernel sets up the `$tw` global variable that is used to store all the state data of the system.