IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.168.72.114 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.207.199.84 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.172.75.123 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.168.72.122 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
194.219.134.234 | gr | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.172.75.126 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.223.246.238 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
178.177.54.157 | ru | 8080 | 33 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
185.132.242.212 | ru | 8083 | 33 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.145.138.156 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
202.85.222.115 | cn | 18081 | 33 minutes ago |
120.132.52.172 | cn | 8888 | 33 minutes ago |
47.243.114.192 | hk | 8180 | 33 minutes ago |
218.252.231.17 | hk | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.175.123.233 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.175.123.238 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
50.171.122.27 | us | 80 | 33 minutes ago |
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A reverse proxy is mainly used by administrators and is responsible for balancing workload and high availability. The reverse proxy redirects received requests to one of its web servers. From the outside it is completely invisible and looks as if all required resources are concentrated directly in the proxy.
All modern Smart TVs allow you to use proxies to connect to the Internet or local network (both on Android and Tizen OS). You have to go to the device settings, open "Network" tab (can be named as "Ethernet"), and then in "Advanced settings" to activate the proxy, if necessary - specify its settings.
To enable responsive design mode in Firefox using Selenium, you can use the webdriver.FirefoxOptions() class and set the desired options for responsive design. Here's an example in Python:
from selenium import webdriver
# Create Firefox options
firefox_options = webdriver.FirefoxOptions()
# Enable responsive design mode
firefox_options.add_argument('--start-maximized') # Start the browser in maximized mode
firefox_options.add_argument('--width=800') # Set the initial width
firefox_options.add_argument('--height=600') # Set the initial height
# Create the WebDriver instance with the specified options
driver = webdriver.Firefox(options=firefox_options)
# Navigate to a website
driver.get('https://example.com')
# Continue with your Selenium script...
# Close the browser when done
driver.quit()
In this example:
--start-maximized
: Opens the browser window in maximized mode.--width=800
: Sets the initial width of the browser window to 800 pixels.--height=600
: Sets the initial height of the browser window to 600 pixels.You can adjust the width and height values based on your specific requirements.
Please note that the responsiveness of the design is primarily determined by the CSS media queries and how the website is designed to handle different viewport sizes. Changing the browser window size using Selenium does not necessarily trigger responsive behavior unless the website's CSS is designed to respond to changes in viewport size.
If you want to simulate specific devices with predefined sizes, you can use the mobile_emulation
capability in Chrome. However, this is specific to Chrome and not available in Firefox.
from selenium import webdriver
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
chrome_options.add_experimental_option('mobileEmulation', {'deviceName': 'iPhone X'})
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=chrome_options)
driver.get('https://example.com')
# Continue with your Selenium script...
driver.quit()
Keep in mind that responsive design testing is often more effectively done using tools built into browsers (e.g., Chrome DevTools) or specialized testing frameworks rather than relying solely on Selenium.
To catch a dynamic element using Selenium, you can use various methods depending on the specifics of the element and the browser you are using. Here are some common approaches:
Using WebDriverWait and expected_conditions:
The WebDriverWait class is used to wait for a specific condition to be met before proceeding with the script. You can use the expected_conditions module to define the condition you want to wait for.
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
driver.get("https://www.example.com")
dynamic_element = WebDriverWait(driver, 10).until(
EC.presence_of_element_located((By.ID, "dynamic-element-id"))
)
In this example, the script will wait up to 10 seconds for the element with the ID dynamic-element-id to appear on the page. Once the element is present, it can be interacted with or located.
Using JavaScript to interact with dynamic elements:
You can use the execute_script() method to run JavaScript code in the context of the current page. This allows you to interact with dynamic elements that may not be accessible through the regular Selenium methods.
from selenium import webdriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
driver.get("https://www.example.com")
dynamic_element = driver.execute_script("return document.getElementById('dynamic-element-id');")
In this example, the script runs JavaScript code to get a reference to the element with the ID dynamic-element-id. You can then interact with the element using JavaScript or Selenium methods.
Using actions with dynamic elements:
The actions module allows you to simulate user interactions, such as mouse movements and clicks. You can use this module to interact with dynamic elements that require user-like interaction.
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.action_chains import ActionChains
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
driver.get("https://www.example.com")
dynamic_element = driver.find_element(By.ID, "dynamic-element-id")
actions = ActionChains(driver)
actions.move_to_element(dynamic_element).perform()
actions.click(dynamic_element).perform()
In this example, the script moves the mouse cursor to the dynamic element and simulates a click, which may be necessary if the element is interactive or requires user-like interaction.
Remember to replace "https://www.example.com", "dynamic-element-id", and other elements with the actual values for the website you are working with. Also, ensure that the browser driver (e.g., ChromeDriver for Google Chrome) is installed and properly configured in your environment.
On smartphones, when a proxy is turned on, the corresponding indicator (the "VPN" icon) appears in the status bar. In Windows you have to go to "Settings", open "Network and Internet". Under "Proxy Server", if the item "Manual" is activated, it means that the proxy is engaged right now.
What else…