IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
50.217.226.41 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
209.97.150.167 | us | 3128 | 23 minutes ago |
50.174.7.162 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
50.169.37.50 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
190.108.84.168 | pe | 4145 | 23 minutes ago |
50.174.7.159 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
72.10.160.91 | ca | 29605 | 23 minutes ago |
50.171.122.27 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
218.252.231.17 | hk | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
50.220.168.134 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
50.223.246.238 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
185.132.242.212 | ru | 8083 | 23 minutes ago |
159.203.61.169 | ca | 8080 | 23 minutes ago |
50.223.246.239 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
47.243.114.192 | hk | 8180 | 23 minutes ago |
50.169.222.243 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
72.10.160.174 | ca | 1871 | 23 minutes ago |
50.174.7.152 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
50.174.7.157 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
50.174.7.154 | us | 80 | 23 minutes ago |
Simple tool for complete proxy management - purchase, renewal, IP list update, binding change, upload lists. With easy integration into all popular programming languages, PapaProxy API is a great choice for developers looking to optimize their systems.
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Select the "Proxy" tab in the "Network" window, then click on Win+C and find the "Settings" item. In the window that opens, stop at "Change computer settings" and go to "Network". Select the "Proxy" line here and disable the proxy functionality.
The main scenarios for using a proxy server: bypassing blocking, hiding the real IP, protection of confidential data when connecting to public WiFi access points, interaction with blocked applications, connection to closed portals, forums (which operate only in one country, region).
In C++, parsing XML Schema Definition (XSD) files involves reading and interpreting the structure defined in the XSD to understand the schema of XML documents. There is no standard library in C++ specifically for parsing XSD files, but you can use existing XML parsing libraries in conjunction with your own logic to achieve this.
Here's an example using the pugixml library for XML parsing in C++. Before you begin, make sure to download and install the pugixml library (https://pugixml.org/) and link it to your project.
#include
#include "pugixml.hpp"
void parseXSD(const char* xsdFilePath) {
pugi::xml_document doc;
if (doc.load_file(xsdFilePath)) {
// Iterate through elements and attributes in the XSD
for (pugi::xml_node node = doc.child("xs:schema"); node; node = node.next_sibling("xs:schema")) {
for (pugi::xml_node element = node.child("xs:element"); element; element = element.next_sibling("xs:element")) {
const char* elementName = element.attribute("name").value();
std::cout << "Element Name: " << elementName << std::endl;
// You can extract more information or navigate deeper into the XSD structure as needed
}
}
} else {
std::cerr << "Failed to load XSD file." << std::endl;
}
}
int main() {
const char* xsdFilePath = "path/to/your/file.xsd";
parseXSD(xsdFilePath);
return 0;
}
In this example:
pugixml
library is used to load and parse the XSD file.<xs:schema>
elements and extracts information about <xs:element>
elements.Remember to replace "path/to/your/file.xsd"
with the actual path to your XSD file.
Note that handling XSD files can be complex depending on the complexity of the schema. If your XSD contains namespaces or more intricate structures, you might need to adjust the code accordingly.
Always check the documentation of the XML parsing library you choose for specific details on usage and features. Additionally, be aware that XML schema parsing in C++ is not as standardized as XML parsing itself, and the approach may vary based on the specific requirements of your application.
In Selenium, you can add headers to your web requests using the webdriver.ChromeOptions class. This is useful when you want to simulate certain HTTP headers in your Selenium-driven browser. Here's an example of how to add headers to Selenium using the Chrome WebDriver:
from selenium import webdriver
# Create ChromeOptions object
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
# Add headers to the options
chrome_options.add_argument("--disable-blink-features=AutomationControlled") # Example header
# Instantiate the Chrome WebDriver with options
driver = webdriver.Chrome(options=chrome_options)
# Now you can use the driver for your automation tasks
driver.get("https://example.com")
# Close the browser window when done
driver.quit()
In this example, we use the add_argument method of ChromeOptions to add headers. The specific argument --disable-blink-features=AutomationControlled is an example of a header that might be used to mitigate detection mechanisms that check for automation.
You can customize the headers by adding more add_argument calls with the desired headers. Here's an example of adding custom headers:
chrome_options.add_argument("user-agent=Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/91.0.4472.124 Safari/537.36")
chrome_options.add_argument("accept-language=en-US,en;q=0.9")
# Add more headers as needed
Remember to adapt the headers based on your requirements and the website you are interacting with. The headers you add should mimic those of a regular user to reduce the chances of detection.
VPN allows you to hide your real IP address, as well as further encrypt your traffic. VPN is also actively used for address spoofing. For example, the user is in the Russian Federation, but by connecting through a VPN server, the site "thinks" that the user is from the United States.
What else…