IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
82.119.96.254 | sk | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
178.220.148.82 | rs | 10801 | 42 minutes ago |
50.221.74.130 | us | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
50.171.122.28 | us | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
50.217.226.47 | us | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
79.101.45.94 | rs | 56921 | 42 minutes ago |
212.31.100.138 | cy | 4153 | 42 minutes ago |
211.75.95.66 | tw | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
39.175.85.98 | cn | 30001 | 42 minutes ago |
194.219.134.234 | gr | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
72.10.164.178 | ca | 32263 | 42 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
50.221.230.186 | us | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
83.1.176.118 | pl | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
176.241.82.149 | iq | 5678 | 42 minutes ago |
125.228.143.207 | tw | 4145 | 42 minutes ago |
125.228.94.199 | tw | 4145 | 42 minutes ago |
67.43.228.250 | ca | 23261 | 42 minutes ago |
189.202.188.149 | mx | 80 | 42 minutes ago |
188.165.192.99 | fr | 8962 | 42 minutes ago |
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Bouncy Castle is a popular cryptography library in C#. If you want to parse and extract Certificate Signing Request (CSR) extensions using Bouncy Castle, you can follow these steps
Add Bouncy Castle Library
First, make sure you have the Bouncy Castle library added to your project. You can do this via NuGet Package Manager:
Install-Package BouncyCastle
Parse CSR:
Use Bouncy Castle to parse the CSR. The following code demonstrates how to parse a CSR from a PEM-encoded string:
using Org.BouncyCastle.Pkcs;
using Org.BouncyCastle.OpenSsl;
using Org.BouncyCastle.X509;
using System;
using System.IO;
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
string csrString = File.ReadAllText("path/to/your/csr.pem");
Pkcs10CertificationRequest csr = ParseCSR(csrString);
// Now you can work with the parsed CSR
}
static Pkcs10CertificationRequest ParseCSR(string csrString)
{
PemReader pemReader = new PemReader(new StringReader(csrString));
object pemObject = pemReader.ReadObject();
if (pemObject is Pkcs10CertificationRequest csr)
{
return csr;
}
throw new InvalidOperationException("Invalid CSR format");
}
}
Extract Extensions:
Once you have the CSR parsed, you can extract extensions using the GetAttributes method. Extensions in a CSR are typically stored in the Attributes property. Here's an example:
foreach (DerObjectIdentifier oid in csr.CertificationRequestInfo.Attributes.GetOids())
{
Attribute attribute = csr.CertificationRequestInfo.Attributes[oid];
// Work with the attribute, e.g., check if it's an extension
if (oid.Equals(PkcsObjectIdentifiers.Pkcs9AtExtensionRequest))
{
X509Extensions extensions = X509Extensions.GetInstance(attribute.AttrValues[0]);
// Now you can iterate over extensions and extract the information you need
foreach (DerObjectIdentifier extOID in extensions.ExtensionOids)
{
X509Extension extension = extensions.GetExtension(extOID);
// Process the extension
}
}
}
Modify the code according to your specific requirements and the structure of your CSR. The example assumes a basic structure, and you may need to adapt it based on your CSR format and the extensions you're interested in.
Changing the WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication) value in Selenium involves modifying the browser's configuration options. WebRTC settings are not directly exposed through Selenium WebDriver, so you need to use browser-specific options or preferences.
Below are examples for changing WebRTC settings in Chrome and Firefox using Selenium in Python. Keep in mind that the availability of certain options may vary depending on the browser version, and these examples may need adjustments based on your specific requirements.
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
# Disable WebRTC
chrome_options.add_argument('--disable-webrtc')
# Other options (customize as needed)
# chrome_options.add_argument('--use-fake-device-for-media-stream')
# chrome_options.add_argument('--use-fake-ui-for-media-stream')
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=chrome_options)
# Your Selenium script...
driver.quit()
In this example, --disable-webrtc is used to disable WebRTC. You can explore other Chrome command-line options related to WebRTC here.
Firefox
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options
firefox_options = Options()
# Disable WebRTC
firefox_options.set_preference('media.peerconnection.enabled', False)
# Other preferences (customize as needed)
# firefox_options.set_preference('media.navigator.streams.fake', True)
# firefox_options.set_preference('media.navigator.permission.disabled', True)
driver = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_options=firefox_options)
# Your Selenium script...
driver.quit()
In this example, media.peerconnection.enabled is set to False to disable WebRTC in Firefox. Additional preferences can be adjusted based on your needs. You can find more Firefox preferences related to WebRTC here.
Remember that changing browser preferences may have implications on the behavior of your application, and modifying settings like WebRTC should be done responsibly and in accordance with the terms of service of the websites you are interacting with.
Selenium is a popular web testing framework used for automating web browsers. SRWare Iron is a web browser based on the Chromium project, which is also used by Google Chrome. Since SRWare Iron is based on Chromium, you can use Selenium to automate testing on SRWare Iron using the ChromeDriver. Here's how you can do it:
1. Install SRWare Iron: Download and install SRWare Iron from the official website (https://www.srware.net/en/Iron).
2. Download ChromeDriver: Download the latest version of ChromeDriver from the official website (https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/chromedriver/downloads). Make sure to download the version that matches your SRWare Iron version.
3. Set up Selenium: Install Selenium for your preferred programming language (e.g., Python, Java, C#, etc.) using the appropriate package manager (e.g., pip, Maven, NuGet, etc.).
4. Write a test script: Write a test script using Selenium to automate your desired actions on SRWare Iron. Here's an example using Python:
from selenium import webdriver
# Set the path to the ChromeDriver executable
chromedriver_path = '/path/to/chromedriver'
# Initialize the ChromeDriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chromedriver_path)
# Open SRWare Iron
driver.get('http://www.example.com')
# Perform your desired actions here
# Close SRWare Iron
driver.quit()
5. Execute the test script: Run your test script using the appropriate command for your programming language. For example, in Python, you can run the script using the following command:
python your_test_script.py
6. Analyze the results: Selenium will execute your test script and perform the automated actions on SRWare Iron. You can then analyze the results to ensure that the actions were performed as expected.
Remember to replace the chromedriver_path variable with the actual path to the ChromeDriver executable on your system. Also, make sure that the version of ChromeDriver you downloaded matches the version of SRWare Iron installed on your system.
To save the results of two Scrapy spiders into one JSON file, you can follow these general steps:
Run Both Spiders:
Run both Scrapy spiders separately to generate their respective output files. Let's assume you have two spiders named spider1 and spider2.
scrapy crawl spider1 -o output1.json
scrapy crawl spider2 -o output2.json
Merge JSON Files:
After running both spiders, you can merge the contents of the two JSON files into a single file using various methods. One way is to use a scripting language like Python.
import json
# Read the contents of both JSON files
with open('output1.json') as f1, open('output2.json') as f2:
data1 = json.load(f1)
data2 = json.load(f2)
# Combine the data from both spiders
combined_data = data1 + data2
# Write the combined data to a new JSON file
with open('combined_output.json', 'w') as combined_file:
json.dump(combined_data, combined_file, indent=2)
Save this Python script (e.g., merge_json.py) in the same directory as the JSON files, and then run it:
python merge_json.py
This script reads the contents of both JSON files, combines the data, and writes the result into a new file (combined_output.json).
Verify the Result:
Check the combined_output.json file to ensure that it contains the merged data from both spiders.
To connect your iPhone to a proxy server, follow these steps:
Open the "Settings" section. Go to the "Wi-Fi" tab. Next to your access point, click on "i". Click on "Proxy settings". Use the manual setting and specify the proxy data. To specify the proxy username and password you need to enable the "Authentication" option. Save your settings.
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