2012年5月7日星期一

weinre - Home

weinre - Home

weinre - Home

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weinre is WEb INspector REmote.
Pronounced like the word "winery". Or maybe like the word "weiner". Who knows,
really.

weinre is a debugger for web pages, like
FireBug (for FireFox)
and
Web Inspector (for WebKit-based browsers), except it's designed
to work remotely, and in particular, to allow you debug web pages
on a mobile device such as a phone
.

Interesting places to visit:

videos at YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=weinre

this documentation:

http://people.apache.org/~pmuellr/weinre/ [temporary]

unofficial binary packages:

http://people.apache.org/~pmuellr/weinre/ [temporary]

issues:

https://issues.apache.org/jira/gobble-de-gook/...

create a new issue:bug
or
new feature

 

cloneable source at Apache:

https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator-cordova-weinre.git

Apache repo cloned at GitHub:

https://github.com/apache/incubator-cordova-weinre

mailing lists at Apache:

http://incubator.apache.org/cordova/#mailing-list (use callback-dev)

discussion at Google Group:

http://groups.google.com/group/weinre

More information on weinre's big brothers, Web Inspector / Google Chrome
Developer Tools, is available at
Google's Chrome Dev Tools pages
and
Apple's Web Inspector pages.

If you aren't familiar with FireBug or Web Inspector,
weinre isn't going to make too much sense to you.
weinre reuses the user interface code from the
Web Inspector project at WebKit,
so if you've used Safari's Web Inspector or Chrome's Developer Tools,
weinre will be very familiar. If you're not
familiar with Web Inspector, the links above to Google's and Apple's documentation
will be useful.

Here's an example session using weinre:

Two screen captures are shown above. On the left is the
weinre client application, displaying debug
information.
On the right is the target web page, running in Mobile Safari in the iOS Simulator.

In normal usage, you will be running the client application in a browser
on your desktop/laptop, and running a target web page on your mobile device.

In the session above, the debugger is display the Elements panel, with the
embedded console expanded in the bottom third of the window. In the console
area, we've entered two statements:

document.body.style.backgroundColor
document.body.style.backgroundColor = "pink"

The result of running the first statement shows the value of the body's background style is not set.
The second statement sets the body's background to pink. That horrifying pink
background is then rendered in the target's window.

In addition, an h1 element is selected in the upper third of the
Elements panel, which causes the side panels on the right to be filled in with
relevant information. In this case, the matched CSS rules for that h1
element are being shown.

If you are familiar with WebKit's Web Inspector,
a partial list of differences between it and weinre
are listed below:

  • weinre does not make use of any 'native' code,
    it's all JavaScript (and currently Java code for the 'server').

     

  • Because weinre doesn't use 'native' code,
    it's functionality is limited. For instance, source level debug of JavaScript
    is not possible
    easy.

     

  • Because weinre doesn't use 'native' code,
    the debug target code will run on browsers
    without specialized debug support. For instance, a browser running on your phone.

     

  • weinre supports 'remote' interaction,
    so you can run the debugger user interface on one
    machine and can debug a web page running
    on another machine. For instance, debug a web page displayed on your phone from your
    laptop.

     

  • Because weinre supports 'remote' interaction,
    multiple debug clients can be debugging the same debug target at the same time.

     

  • One thing not different from Web Inspector is that the debug client
    user interface only runs on WebKit-based browsers.

     

Supported Libraries and Platforms

Generally version numbers listed here are the earliest
versions of the relevant thing that have been tested.
Later versions of those things are also hopefully supported,
but let us know.

Libraries not supported

  • versions of Prototype.js before version 1.7 are not supported,
    as they do not support the JSON.stringify() API correctly. You
    will get an alert() in the web page you are debugging if you
    attempt to debug it with weinre and you are using an unsupported
    version of Prototype.js.

Platforms supported - debug server

Any platform that supports node.js.

Platforms supported - debug client

The browser where the debugger user interface runs.

  • Google Chrome
  • Apple Safari
  • Other recent-ish WebKit-based browsers

Platforms supported - debug target

The browser with the page you are debugging.

  • Android Browser application
  • iOS Mobile Safari application
  • PhoneGap/Cordova
  • other

Platforms not supported - debug target

  • iOS 3.1.3 or earlier
  • webOS 1.45 or earlier

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