IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
185.93.89.187 | ir | 9332 | 54 minutes ago |
67.201.33.10 | us | 25283 | 54 minutes ago |
211.128.96.206 | 80 | 54 minutes ago | |
23.247.136.254 | sg | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
89.58.45.248 | de | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
203.99.240.182 | jp | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
80.120.130.231 | at | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
68.185.57.66 | us | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
50.55.52.50 | us | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
203.99.240.179 | jp | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
202.61.199.166 | de | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
89.58.55.106 | de | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
50.122.86.118 | us | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
66.191.31.158 | us | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
79.110.201.235 | pl | 8081 | 54 minutes ago |
95.47.239.221 | uz | 3128 | 54 minutes ago |
32.223.6.94 | us | 80 | 54 minutes ago |
123.30.154.171 | vn | 7777 | 54 minutes ago |
Our proxies work perfectly with all popular tools for web scraping, automation, and anti-detect browsers. Load your proxies into your favorite software or use them in your scripts in just seconds:
Connection formats you know and trust: IP:port or IP:port@login:password.
Any programming language: Python, JavaScript, PHP, Java, and more.
Top automation and scraping tools: Scrapy, Selenium, Puppeteer, ZennoPoster, BAS, and many others.
Anti-detect browsers: Multilogin, GoLogin, Dolphin, AdsPower, and other popular solutions.
Looking for full automation and proxy management?
Take advantage of our user-friendly PapaProxy API: purchase proxies, renew plans, update IP lists, manage IP bindings, and export ready-to-use lists — all in just a few clicks, no hassle.
PapaProxy offers the simplicity and flexibility that both beginners and experienced developers will appreciate.
And 500+ more tools and coding languages to explore
When scraping paginated content, fetching the "next page" usually involves extracting the URL of the next page from the HTML of the current page. In PHP, you can use a library like Simple HTML DOM Parser to parse HTML and extract the URL for the next page.
Here's an example of how you might scrape the next page URL using PHP
Install Simple HTML DOM Parser:
You can download it from sourceforge and include it in your project, or use Composer:
composer require sunra/php-simple-html-dom-parser
Write a PHP script to scrape the next page URL:
find('a.next-page-link', 0);
if ($nextPageLink) {
// Extract the href attribute (URL) from the link
$nextPageUrl = $nextPageLink->href;
return $nextPageUrl;
} else {
return null; // No next page link found
}
}
// Example usage
$currentUrl = 'https://example.com/page1'; // Replace with the URL of the current page
$nextPageUrl = scrapeNextPageUrl($currentUrl);
if ($nextPageUrl) {
echo "Next Page URL: $nextPageUrl";
} else {
echo "No Next Page URL found.";
}
Replace the $currentUrl variable with the URL of the current page.
Adjust the HTML element selector ('a.next-page-link') based on the structure of the website you are scraping.
Run the script:
Execute the PHP script to see the URL of the next page.
To send a UDP request to a STUN server in C++, you can use the following example code. This example uses the boost::asio library for handling asynchronous I/O operations and boost::beast for handling UDP communication. Make sure you have the Boost library installed on your system before running this code.
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
namespace http = boost::beast::http;
using tcp = boost::asio::ip::tcp;
using udp = boost::asio::ip::udp;
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
if (argc != 3) {
std::cerr << "Usage: stun_udp_request " << std::endl;
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
boost::asio::io_context ioc;
udp::resolver resolver(ioc);
udp::resolver::results_type results = resolver.resolve(argv[1], argv[2]);
if (results.empty()) {
std::cerr << "Cannot resolve: " << argv[1] << ":" << argv[2] << std::endl;
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
udp::socket udp_socket(ioc);
udp_socket.connect(results.begin()->endpoint());
// Prepare the STUN Binding Request
std::string stun_request =
"BINDING_REQUEST\r\n"
"MIXED_RELAY\r\n"
"USER-AGENT: STUN-UDP-Example\r\n"
"\r\n";
// Send the STUN Binding Request
boost::system::error_code ignored_error;
udp_socket.send_to(boost::asio::buffer(stun_request), results.begin()->endpoint(), 0, ignored_error);
// Receive the STUN Binding Response
boost::beast::flat_buffer buffer;
http::response response;
udp_socket.receive_message(buffer, response);
// Print the STUN Binding Response
std::cout << "STUN Binding Response:\n";
std::cout << response.what() << std::endl;
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
To compile the example, you can use the following command:
g++ -std=c++17 -o stun_udp_request stun_udp_request.cpp -lboost_system -lboost_as
To connect to a proxy server with a password, provide the proxy address, port, and authentication credentials (username and password) in your browser or application settings. For popular browsers like Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, follow these general steps:
Open the browser and go to its settings.
Locate the proxy settings section.
Enter the proxy server address, port, username, and password.
Save the settings.
VPN is considered a more advanced technology for anonymization on the Internet. The main (but not the only) difference between VPN is the encryption of all traffic. But this decreases the connection speed and also increases the response time of the remote server. A proxy works slightly faster in this respect.
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…