RANCID might be a bit more popular than Data Miner. We know about 9 links to it since March 2021 and only 7 links to Data Miner. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Data Miner - A browser extension (Google Chrome, MS Edge) for data extraction from web pages CSV or Excel. The free plan gives you 500 pages/month. - Source: dev.to / 5 months ago
The web app at https://dataminer.io/. If you open it on your Saved for Later page, it should show you a public "recipe" that I made to scrape the data. Possibly others as well. Source: over 1 year ago
Data Miner - A browser extension (Google Chrome, MS Edge) for data extraction from web pages CSV or Excel. The free plan gives you 500 pages/month. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Ungh, annoying. There are lots of free scraping tools you could play with like https://dataminer.io but I have no idea how practical that approach will be for you. Source: over 1 year ago
Go on your states licensure website, look up the directory of licensed professionals and use a data mining tool (https://dataminer.io/) to scrape the website of all the emails or everyone who's licensed. Source: about 2 years ago
A decade ago I worked for a shop that needed to routinely back up 100+ cisco switches and routers and refused to pay for solarwinds. I setup a light weight freebsd vm to run this open source software: https://shrubbery.net/rancid/ (Rancid: Really Awesome New Cisco config Differ) and set it to scrape all the equipment every 12 errors. Source: over 1 year ago
Anyways Rancid does support cvs, svn, and git. Though I have only used it with cvs. Basically what it does, is checks out the configuration, downloads the configuration with other information about the state of the device, commits the configurations(which only changed ones will be in the latest check-ins, and then it can send an email of the changes. Source: about 2 years ago
RANCID - Really Awesome New Cisco confIg Differ monitors a router's (or more generally a device's) configuration, including software and hardware (cards, serial numbers, etc) and uses CVS (Concurrent Version System), Subversion or Git to maintain history of changes. Source: about 2 years ago
If you want to use this as an opportunity to learn Ansible, or you don't want to add another tool to the stack, this is a fine use case. Otherwise, I would consider using either RANCID or Oxidized for configuration backup. Source: about 2 years ago
Before I knew about RANCiD (https://shrubbery.net/rancid), I wrote my own Perl application to telnet into a Foundry Networks switch and TFTP its configuration to my computer so I could back it up. At a future employer, I rewrote another coworkers Perl application that collected SNMP values from devices and did stuff with it (forget what all I did then). Source: over 2 years ago
import.io - Import. io helps its users find the internet data they need, organize and store it, and transform it into a format that provides them with the context they need.
Unimus - Unimus is a Network Automation and Configuration management (NCM) solution designed for fast deployment network-wide and ease of use. Unimus does not require learning any abstraction or templating languages, and does not require any coding skills.
Apify - Apify is a web scraping and automation platform that can turn any website into an API.
Oxidized - configuration backup software (IOS, JunOS) - silly attempt at rancid
Content Grabber - Content Grabber is an automated web scraping tool.
GenieACS - A fast and lightweight TR-069 Auto Configuration Server (ACS)