Check your proxies
like it's 1998.
Paste a list, hit two buttons. Proxolog tells you which proxies are alive and where in the world they're hiding — HTTP, HTTPS, SOCKS4 and SOCKS5, auto-detected if you don't even know which is which.
What's in the box
Geo Lookup
Resolve country and city per proxy from a local MaxMind or DB-IP
.mmdb file. Set a backup database and Proxolog falls
back to it automatically when the primary one draws a blank.
Fast, Multi-Threaded
Up to 20 proxies are checked in parallel, with a live progress counter and a Stop button if you change your mind halfway through a huge list.
Auto Protocol Detection
Not sure if a proxy is HTTP or SOCKS? Paste it as a bare
ip:port and Proxolog tries HTTP, then SOCKS5, then
SOCKS4 before calling it dead.
One-Click Copy
Right-click any cell to copy just that value, or grab every working proxy — or just their IPs — straight to your clipboard.
Load From File
Drop in a huge .txt list in one click, with the
choice to replace or append to what's already pasted in.
Hide the Dead
One button filters the results down to only the proxies that actually answered back. Click again to bring the rest back.
Remembers Everything
Your GeoIP database paths and sound preference are saved next to the app and reloaded automatically the next time you open it.
Sound Notification
Kick off a check on a few thousand proxies, tab away, and get a little beep the moment it's done.
See it in action
System requirements
- OS: Windows 7, 8, 10 or 11 (64-bit)
- Disk space: ~15 MB
- Memory: 50 MB RAM while running
- Internet connection required for live proxy checks
- Installation: none — just run the .exe
- GeoIP database: bring your own free
.mmdbfile (links inside the app's Help menu)
Frequently asked questions
How do I set up the GeoIP database?
- Download a free
.mmdbGeoIP database (see the next question for where). - Open Proxolog and click the ⚙ Settings button in the toolbar.
- Click Primary GeoIP DB and pick the
.mmdbfile you downloaded. - (Optional) Click Backup GeoIP DB to set a second database — Proxolog automatically falls back to it whenever the primary one can't find a city for an IP.
Both paths are saved next to the app and reloaded automatically the next time you open it, so you only need to do this once.
Where do I download a GeoIP database?
Any of these free sources work — Proxolog reads the standard MaxMind DB (.mmdb) format,
regardless of who published it:
- DB-IP City Lite — no signup, updated monthly.
- P3TERX/GeoLite.mmdb on GitHub — a mirror of MaxMind's GeoLite2 City database, no signup needed.
- MaxMind GeoLite2 directly — the original source, free but requires creating an account.
These same links are also available inside the app itself, under the ? Help button.
Do I need a GeoIP database to check if proxies are alive?
No. Check Alive works with zero setup. A GeoIP database is only needed for Get Geo (the country/city lookup) — everything else works out of the box.
Which proxy protocols does Proxolog support?
HTTP, HTTPS, SOCKS4 and SOCKS5. If you paste a proxy as a bare ip:port with no
protocol prefix, Proxolog tries HTTP first, then SOCKS5, then SOCKS4, and reports back whichever
one actually worked in the Type column.
Does Proxolog send my proxy list anywhere?
No. Everything runs locally on your machine. To test whether a proxy is alive, Proxolog makes an outbound request through that proxy to a couple of well-known "what's my IP" services (httpbin.org and api.ipify.org) — the same way any browser or app would use that proxy. Nothing about your proxy list is sent to Some Web or anyone else.
Is Proxolog free?
Yes, free for personal and commercial use.
Is there a Mac or Linux version?
Not right now — Proxolog is a Windows-only .exe today.
Get Proxolog
One .exe. No installer, no admin rights, no nonsense.
⬇ Download Proxolog v1.0 for WindowsMade by Some Web · free for personal and commercial use