Run weinre as a grunt task for easy configuration and integration with the rest of your workflow
If you haven't used grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a gruntfile as well as install and use grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, install this plugin with this command:
npm install grunt-weinre --save-devThen add this line to your project's Gruntfile.js gruntfile:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-weinre');The minimal usage of weinre runs with no options:
weinre: {
dev: {}
}The default HTTP port of 8080 is pretty popular, so offsetting it by 2 may help you dodge a collision. Also setting the boundHost to -all- will let your mobile devices connect via your local ip address, since the default localhost won't work for them.
weinre: {
dev: {
options: {
httpPort: 8082,
boundHost: '-all-'
}
}
}weinre: {
dev: {
options: {
httpPort: 8080,
boundHost: 'localhost',
verbose: false,
debug: false,
readTimeout: 5,
deathTimeout: 15
}
}
}A common use case is to run weinre with other tasks concurrently. This can be achieved with the following config for the grunt-concurrent plugin which runs weinre, nodemon, node-inspector, and watch in a single terminal tab:
concurrent: {
dev: {
tasks: ['weinre', 'nodemon', 'node-inspector', 'watch'],
options: {
logConcurrentOutput: true
}
}
}Type: Number Default: 8080
Port to run the http server on.
Type: String Default: 'localhost'
IP address to bind the server to.
Type: Boolean Default: false
Print more diagnostics.
Type: Boolean Default: false
Print even more diagnostics.
Type: Number Default: 5
Seconds to wait for a client message.
Type: Number Default: 3 * readTimeout
Seconds to wait to kill client.
0.0.2 - Fixed error logging, allowed weinre to be listed as an app dependency.
0.0.1 - Initial release.

