Over the past few weeks I've been working on getting some type of
logging going for Safari on the iPhone.  This is nowhere near as
useful as Joe's iBug for JS debugging, but it does provide some of the
features provided by FireBug's net tab.  You can, for example, see
what pages are being accessed by a particular page, or widget, and get
a timeline of events.  Basically anything on the phone that uses http
is logged.

It requires hacking the phone and installing AppTap, but it is
specifically designed to help troubleshoot web-based applications
written for Safari on the iPhone.

Oh, there's a disclaimer as well.  I own Zoto.com (working on a iUi
app!), and also work for Splunk, a company that sells a logfile search
engine product.  I thought it would be interesting to bring a couple
of these technologies together in one 'hack' that helped out the
iphone web development community a little with logging.  Splunk is
FREE for use on stuff like this, and is fun to hack around on if you
have rather smallish logfiles.

http://dev.splunk.com/2007/10/10/splunk-hack-2-logging-safari-requests-on-the-iphone/
- walkthrough for the hack
http://www.splunk.com/index.php/predownload?d=progeneric?ac=kc1 - link
for downloading Splunk for OSX

I'm happy to answer any questions or help with problems getting the
hack running!


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