IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
50.202.75.26 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.218.208.8 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.175.212.79 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
51.75.126.150 | fr | 62889 | 49 minutes ago |
41.207.187.178 | tg | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
213.33.126.130 | at | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
194.219.134.234 | gr | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
189.202.188.149 | mx | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.145.138.146 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.175.123.239 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
78.80.228.150 | cz | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
212.69.125.33 | ru | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.145.138.154 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
122.116.29.68 | tw | 4145 | 49 minutes ago |
80.228.235.6 | de | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.175.212.76 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
85.8.68.2 | de | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
50.239.72.19 | us | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
185.139.56.133 | ge | 4145 | 49 minutes ago |
83.1.176.118 | pl | 80 | 49 minutes ago |
Simple tool for complete proxy management - purchase, renewal, IP list update, binding change, upload lists. With easy integration into all popular programming languages, PapaProxy API is a great choice for developers looking to optimize their systems.
Quick and easy integration.
Full control and management of proxies via API.
Extensive documentation for a quick start.
Compatible with any programming language that supports HTTP requests.
Ready to improve your product? Explore our API and start integrating today!
And 500+ more programming tools and languages
Building a chain of proxies in Selenium involves configuring a WebDriver with a Proxy object that represents a chain of proxies. Here's an example using Python with Selenium and the Chrome WebDriver:
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.proxy import Proxy, ProxyType
# Create a Proxy object for the first proxy in the chain
proxy1 = Proxy()
proxy1.http_proxy = "http://proxy1.example.com:8080"
proxy1.ssl_proxy = "http://proxy1.example.com:8080"
proxy1.proxy_type = ProxyType.MANUAL
# Create a Proxy object for the second proxy in the chain
proxy2 = Proxy()
proxy2.http_proxy = "http://proxy2.example.com:8080"
proxy2.ssl_proxy = "http://proxy2.example.com:8080"
proxy2.proxy_type = ProxyType.MANUAL
# Create a Proxy object for the final proxy in the chain
proxy3 = Proxy()
proxy3.http_proxy = "http://proxy3.example.com:8080"
proxy3.ssl_proxy = "http://proxy3.example.com:8080"
proxy3.proxy_type = ProxyType.MANUAL
# Create a chain of proxies
proxies_chain = f"{proxy1.proxy, proxy2.proxy, proxy3.proxy}"
# Set up ChromeOptions with the proxy chain
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
chrome_options.add_argument(f"--proxy-server={proxies_chain}")
# Create the WebDriver with ChromeOptions
driver = webdriver.Chrome(options=chrome_options)
# Now you can use the driver with the proxy chain for your automation tasks
driver.get("https://example.com")
# Close the browser window when done
driver.quit()
In this example:
Three Proxy objects (proxy1, proxy2, and proxy3) are created, each representing a different proxy in the chain. You need to replace the placeholder URLs (http://proxy1.example.com:8080, etc.) with the actual proxy server URLs.
The ProxyType.MANUAL option is used to indicate that the proxy settings are configured manually.
The proxies_chain variable is a comma-separated string representing the chain of proxies.
The --proxy-server option is added to ChromeOptions to specify the proxy chain.
A Chrome WebDriver instance is created with the configured ChromeOptions.
If you want to interact with Discord programmatically, it's recommended to use Discord's official API. The Discord API allows you to create bots that can perform actions within the guidelines set by Discord. You can create a Discord bot using a library like discord.py (for Python) or other languages' equivalents.
Here is a very basic example using discord.py to send a message through a Discord bot:
import discord
from discord.ext import commands
intents = discord.Intents.default()
intents.messages = True
bot = commands.Bot(command_prefix='!', intents=intents)
@bot.event
async def on_ready():
print(f'Logged in as {bot.user.name}')
@bot.command(name='send_message')
async def send_message(ctx, *, message):
channel = ctx.channel
await channel.send(message)
# Replace 'YOUR_BOT_TOKEN' with your actual bot token
bot.run('YOUR_BOT_TOKEN')
- Create a bot on the Discord Developer Portal.
- Copy the bot token.
- Replace 'YOUR_BOT_TOKEN' with the actual token in the code above.
- Install the discord.py library using pip install discord.py.
- Run the script.
This bot will respond to a command !send_message followed by the message you want to send. This is just a basic example, and you can extend it to perform more actions according to your needs.
It depends on the purpose for which you plan to work with proxies at all. Personally, one is enough for myself. But if you plan to do massive parsing, it may not be enough to have 100 pieces.
To install a proxy server in Google Chrome, you must do the following steps:
Open the browser.
Click the "?" icon in the upper right corner.
Go to "Settings".
Select the "Advanced" option.
Click the "System" tab.
Click on "Open proxy settings for your computer".
Click on "Network settings".
Activate the "Use proxy server" option.
In the tab that opens, specify the IP address of the proxy server. You must enter the address in the field of the protocol to which the proxy server belongs. You can get this information from the provider. Click the "OK" button to save your settings.
Go through the "Control Panel" to the "Browser Properties" section. Open the "Connections" tab, and then by clicking on the "Network settings" button at the bottom, uncheck the "Proxy server" box. Also uncheck the "Auto-detection" checkbox under "Auto-configuration".
What else…