Author | Message | Time |
---|---|---|
Archangel | Any one know how to make a proxie tester? Or i mean, what does it do to test the proxie? | July 13, 2005, 2:28 AM |
R.a.B.B.i.T | It tries to connect to the proxy specified on the port specified. If it can't connect, it's a bad proxy. If it does connect, it *should* show how long it took. | July 13, 2005, 4:28 AM |
Archangel | [quote author=rabbit link=topic=12194.msg120465#msg120465 date=1121228909] It tries to connect to the proxy specified on the port specified. If it can't connect, it's a bad proxy. If it does connect, it *should* show how long it took. [/quote] Isn't that for scanning? The testing is connecting to the proxy and requesting some information, but i dont remember (i think). | July 13, 2005, 4:49 AM |
R.a.B.B.i.T | O...hah. Yeah. Testing, just connect to the proxy, and send a GET request for some site (like google.com). | July 13, 2005, 5:58 AM |
PaiD | or if a sock proxy. Follow the protocol and connect to somethin. (IE: If makin a proxy tester that tests proxies on bnet. Tell it to connect to 1 of the realms) | July 13, 2005, 8:04 AM |
Archangel | Oh ok ;). I will do it and get back to ya soon :). | July 13, 2005, 2:59 PM |
iago | yaph ("yet another proxy hunter") can search large spaces for socks4, socks5, and http proxies. I'm not sure how it works or how it tests them, but it's opensource so you can find out. http://yaph.sourceforge.net/ | July 13, 2005, 5:20 PM |
Lenny | Note that when you scan, you touch alot of machines that you don't want to touch. Scan at your own risk.... | July 15, 2005, 9:08 AM |