If you are looking to utilize this list in a script (Python) or a configuration file, it should follow this "proper" structure: 1. Standard Proxy Format
To "generate a proper piece" from this, I’ve structured a professional technical summary and a snippet of how that data should be formatted for use in network tools or programming environments. Technical Summary: Proxy List Analysis SOCKS4 (Layer 5 TCP proxying) Source Format: Plaintext (.txt) Timestamp: 2024-11-22 | 02:48:45 SOCKS4-24-11-22-02-48-45.txt
import socks import socket # Define proxy settings from your .txt file PROXY_IP = "192.168.1.1" PROXY_PORT = 1080 socks.set_default_proxy(socks.SOCKS4, PROXY_IP, PROXY_PORT) socket.socket = socks.socksocket # Now all socket traffic is routed through the SOCKS4 proxy import urllib.request print(urllib.request.urlopen("http://ifconfig.me").read()) Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard Security Note If you are looking to utilize this list
Anonymous web scraping, bypassing geo-restrictions, or routing network traffic through intermediate nodes. Implementation Guide Copied to clipboard Security Note Anonymous web scraping,
Proxy lists found in this format are often "public" and highly volatile. You should run a proxy checker to verify which IPs are still "alive" and have low latency.
If you are a developer, use the PySocks library to route your traffic through one of these SOCKS4 entries:
Most software expects the data in the IP:Port format. If your file is a raw dump, ensure it looks like this: 192.168.1.1:1080 45.77.12.110:443 103.21.160.10:8080 Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard 2. Python Usage Snippet