IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
194.182.163.117 | ch | 3128 | 38 minutes ago |
203.99.240.179 | jp | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
85.8.68.2 | de | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
213.16.81.182 | hu | 35559 | 38 minutes ago |
79.110.201.235 | pl | 8081 | 38 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
181.143.61.124 | co | 4153 | 38 minutes ago |
41.207.187.178 | tg | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
194.158.203.14 | by | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
79.106.170.126 | al | 4145 | 38 minutes ago |
125.228.143.207 | tw | 4145 | 38 minutes ago |
125.228.94.199 | tw | 4145 | 38 minutes ago |
39.175.75.144 | cn | 30001 | 38 minutes ago |
218.75.102.198 | cn | 8000 | 38 minutes ago |
122.116.29.68 | tw | 4145 | 38 minutes ago |
213.33.126.130 | at | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
80.120.130.231 | at | 80 | 38 minutes ago |
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To run Firefox with Selenium and connected extensions, you'll need to use the FirefoxDriverService and FirefoxOptions. You can also set the path to the Firefox executable and the path to the extensions' .xpi files using the FirefoxBinary and FirefoxProfile classes. Here's an example of how to do this:
Install the required NuGet packages:
Install-Package OpenQA.Selenium.Firefox.WebDriver -Version 3.141.0
Install-Package OpenQA.Selenium.Support.UI -Version 3.141.0
Create a method to add extensions to the Firefox profile:
using OpenQA.Selenium;
using OpenQA.Selenium.Firefox;
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
public static IWebDriver CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions(string[] extensionPaths)
{
var firefoxOptions = new FirefoxOptions();
var firefoxBinary = new FirefoxBinary(Path.GetDirectoryName(FirefoxDriverService.DefaultServicePath));
var firefoxProfile = new FirefoxProfile();
// Add extensions to the Firefox profile
foreach (var extensionPath in extensionPaths)
{
var extensionFile = new FileInfo(extensionPath);
if (extensionFile.Exists)
{
firefoxProfile.AddExtension(extensionPath);
}
}
firefoxOptions.BinaryLocation = firefoxBinary.Path;
firefoxOptions.Profile = firefoxProfile;
// Start the FirefoxDriverService with the specified Firefox binary
var driverService = FirefoxDriverService.CreateDefaultService(firefoxBinary.Path, FirefoxDriverService.DefaultPort);
driverService.EnableVerboseLogging = true;
// Create the FirefoxDriver with the specified options
var driver = new FirefoxDriver(driverService, firefoxOptions);
return driver;
}
Use the CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions method in your test code:
using OpenQA.Selenium;
using System;
namespace SeleniumFirefoxExtensionsExample
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Paths to the extensions' .xpi files
string[] extensionPaths = new[]
{
@"path\to\extension1.xpi",
@"path\to\extension2.xpi"
};
// Create the FirefoxDriver with connected extensions
using (var driver = CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions(extensionPaths))
{
// Set up the WebDriver
driver.Manage().Window.Maximize();
// Navigate to the target web page
driver.Navigate().GoToUrl("https://www.example.com");
// Perform any additional actions as needed
// Close the browser
driver.Quit();
}
}
}
}
In this example, we first create a method called CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions that takes an array of extension paths as input. Inside the method, we set up the FirefoxOptions, FirefoxBinary, and FirefoxProfile to include the specified extensions. Then, we start the FirefoxDriverService with the specified Firefox binary and create the FirefoxDriver with the specified options.
In the test code, we call the CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions method with the paths to the extensions' .xpi files and use the returned IWebDriver instance to interact with the browser.
Remember to replace "path\to\extension1.xpi" and "path\to\extension2.xpi" with the actual paths to the extensions' .xpi files you want to connect.
To save cookies in SQLite3 using Selenium, you'll need to follow these steps:
1. Install the required packages: Make sure you have Selenium and SQLite3 installed. You can install SQLite3 using pip:
pip install sqlite3
2. Connect to the SQLite3 database: Before saving cookies to SQLite3, you need to establish a connection to the database.
import sqlite3
# Connect to the SQLite3 database (or create it if it doesn't exist)
conn = sqlite3.connect("cookies.db")
cursor = conn.cursor()
# Create the cookies table if it doesn't exist
cursor.execute("""
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS cookies (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
name TEXT NOT NULL,
value TEXT NOT NULL,
domain TEXT NOT NULL,
path TEXT NOT NULL,
expiry TEXT NOT NULL
)
""")
# Commit the changes and close the connection
conn.commit()
conn.close()
3. Save cookies to SQLite3 using Selenium: In your Selenium code, you can save cookies to the SQLite3 database by iterating through the cookies in the browser and inserting them into the database.
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
import sqlite3
# Set the path to the ChromeDriver executable
chrome_driver_path = "path/to/chromedriver"
# Set the preference to save downloaded files with a specific name pattern
options = Options()
options.add_argument("download.default_directory='path/to/download/folder'")
options.add_argument(f"download.download_path='path/to/download/folder'")
options.add_preference("download.filename_template", "%f - %r")
# Initialize the Chrome WebDriver with the specified options
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path=chrome_driver_path, options=options)
# Your Selenium code goes here
# Connect to the SQLite3 database
conn = sqlite3.connect("cookies.db")
cursor = conn.cursor()
# Get all cookies from the browser
cookies = driver.get_cookies()
# Insert cookies into the SQLite3 database
for cookie in cookies:
cursor.execute("""
INSERT INTO cookies (name, value, domain, path, expiry)
VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?)
""", (cookie['name'], cookie['value'], cookie['domain'], cookie['path'], cookie['expiry']))
# Commit the changes and close the connection
conn.commit()
conn.close()
# Your code to save the cookies to SQLite3
# Close the browser
driver.quit()
Replace path/to/chromedriver, path/to/download/folder, and %f - %r with the appropriate values for your setup.
This example saves the cookies from the browser to the SQLite3 database. You can modify the code to load cookies from the database and set them in the browser as needed.
In Key Collector settings, the user can specify parameters of the proxy server through which the program will connect to the network. In the application window, first select "Settings", then go to the "Network" tab and check "Use proxy". Its parameters can be set either manually or through a configuration file.
In Windows 8 and later editions it is recommended to setup network proxy through Group Policy. To do this, run GPMC.msc (via "Run" or enter in the "Search"), then select the section with the users, from the list of parameters select "Internet Settings". Further settings are not different from the standard ones in Windows. You can set proxy, specify the start page, enter restrictions and so on.
If we are talking about disabling Telegram for Android, you need to go to "Data and Memory" and under "Proxy" find "Proxy settings". Here, under "Connections", you should disable the use of a proxy server. If we are talking about disabling Telegram for iOS, then in the "Data and memory" item, you should select "Proxy", then go to the "Use proxy" column, and then move the slider to the "Off" position.
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