IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
194.182.163.117 | ch | 3128 | 27 minutes ago |
203.99.240.179 | jp | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
85.8.68.2 | de | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
213.16.81.182 | hu | 35559 | 27 minutes ago |
79.110.201.235 | pl | 8081 | 27 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
181.143.61.124 | co | 4153 | 27 minutes ago |
41.207.187.178 | tg | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
194.158.203.14 | by | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
79.106.170.126 | al | 4145 | 27 minutes ago |
125.228.143.207 | tw | 4145 | 27 minutes ago |
125.228.94.199 | tw | 4145 | 27 minutes ago |
39.175.75.144 | cn | 30001 | 27 minutes ago |
218.75.102.198 | cn | 8000 | 27 minutes ago |
122.116.29.68 | tw | 4145 | 27 minutes ago |
213.33.126.130 | at | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
80.120.130.231 | at | 80 | 27 minutes ago |
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To specify the data of a proxy server in the Opera browser, you need to follow the algorithm below:
Open the browser.
Click on the Opera icon in the upper left corner.
Go to "Settings".
Select the "Advanced" option.
Scroll down to the "System" tab.
Click "Open proxy settings for computer".
Click on "Network settings".
Activate the "Use a proxy server" option.
In the tab that opens, specify the IP address of the proxy server. The address must be entered in the field of the protocol to which the proxy server belongs. You can get this information from your proxy provider.
Click "OK" to save your settings.
Scraping Razor pages in a separate AppDomain in C# is an advanced scenario, and it's not a common approach. However, if you have specific requirements that necessitate this, you can achieve it by creating a separate AppDomain for the scraping task. Keep in mind that creating a new AppDomain introduces complexity, and you need to consider potential security and performance implications.
Below is a basic example of how you can use a separate AppDomain for scraping Razor pages. In this example, I'm assuming that you want to perform scraping logic within the separate AppDomain:
using System;
using System.Reflection;
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a new AppDomain
AppDomain scraperDomain = AppDomain.CreateDomain("ScraperDomain");
try
{
// Load and execute the scraping logic in the separate AppDomain
scraperDomain.DoCallBack(() =>
{
// This code runs in the separate AppDomain
// Load necessary assemblies (e.g., your scraping library)
Assembly.Load("YourScrapingLibrary");
// Perform your scraping logic
RazorPageScraper scraper = new RazorPageScraper();
scraper.Scrape();
});
}
finally
{
// Unload the AppDomain to release resources
AppDomain.Unload(scraperDomain);
}
}
}
// RazorPageScraper class in a separate assembly or namespace
public class RazorPageScraper
{
public void Scrape()
{
// Your scraping logic here
Console.WriteLine("Scraping Razor pages...");
}
}
In this example:
AppDomain
is created using AppDomain.CreateDomain
.AppDomain
using AppDomain.DoCallBack
.RazorPageScraper
class, containing the scraping logic, is assumed to be in a separate assembly or namespace.Keep in mind:
AppDomain
may have security implications. Ensure that you understand the risks and take appropriate precautions.AppDomain
incurs overhead. It might not be suitable for lightweight scraping tasks.This example is simplified, and you need to adapt it based on your specific requirements and the structure of your scraping code.
To get the content of an HTML element (such as text inside a tag) using Selenium, you can use the text property of the WebElement. Here's an example in Python:
from selenium import webdriver
# Create a WebDriver instance (e.g., Chrome)
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
# Navigate to a webpage
driver.get("https://example.com")
# Find an element by its CSS selector (replace with your actual selector)
element = driver.find_element_by_css_selector("h1")
# Get the text content of the element
element_text = element.text
print("Element Text:", element_text)
# Close the browser when done
driver.quit()
In this example:
WebDriver
instance is created (using Chrome in this case).find_element_by_css_selector
. You can use other locators such as ID, class name, XPath, etc., based on your needs.text
property of the WebElement
is used to retrieve the text content of the element.Adjust the CSS selector in the find_element_by_css_selector
method to match the HTML element you want to extract content from.
Remember that the text
property returns the visible text of the element, excluding any hidden text or text inside child elements. If you need to capture all text content, including hidden elements, you may need to use other methods to extract HTML content and then parse it accordingly.
If you're trying to integrate Selenium into a Java project, you'll need to use the WebDriver for Java API. Here's a step-by-step guide on how to set up Selenium with a Java project
Add Selenium dependencies to your project:
If you're using Maven, add the following dependencies to your pom.xml file:
org.seleniumhq.selenium
selenium-java
3.141.59
org.seleniumhq.selenium
selenium-chrome-driver
3.141.59
If you're using Gradle, add the following dependencies to your build.gradle file:
dependencies {
implementation 'org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-java:3.141.59'
implementation 'org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-chrome-driver:3.141.59'
}
Create a Java class for your Selenium test:
Create a new Java class for your test, for example, DropdownExample.java.
Write the test code:
Here's a simple example of how to write a test that selects an option from a drop-down menu:
import org.openqa.selenium.By;
import org.openqa.selenium.WebDriver;
import org.openqa.selenium.WebElement;
import org.openqa.selenium.chrome.ChromeDriver;
public class DropdownExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Set the path to the ChromeDriver executable
System.setProperty("webdriver.chrome.driver", "/path/to/chromedriver");
// Create a new instance of the ChromeDriver
WebDriver driver = new ChromeDriver();
// Navigate to the webpage containing the drop-down menu
driver.get("http://example.com");
// Locate the drop-down menu element using its ID
WebElement dropDown = driver.findElement(By.id("dropdown-menu-id"));
// Create a Select object to interact with the drop-down menu
Select select = new Select(dropDown);
// Select an option from the drop-down menu by its value attribute
select.selectByValue("option-value");
// Close the WebDriver instance
driver.quit();
}
}
Run the test:
You can run your test using your preferred Java IDE or by using the command line. If you're using Maven, you can run your test with the following command:
mvn test
If you're using Gradle, you can run your test with the following command:
gradle test
This should help you integrate Selenium with your Java project and execute a test that selects an option from a drop-down menu. Make sure to replace "/path/to/chromedriver" with the actual path to your ChromeDriver executable and "http://example.com" with the URL of the webpage containing the drop-down menu.
If your ISP blocks you from downloading torrents, turning on your proxy server is the easiest way around the blockage. How exactly this is done depends on the torrent client you are using. For example, in Qbittorrent you need to go to settings, open "Network" tab, check "Proxy-server" and manually specify its settings. The same way uTorrent is configured.
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