4 htsn-import \- Import XML files from The Sports Network into an RDBMS.
8 \fBhtsn-import\fR [OPTIONS] [FILES]
12 The Sports Network <http://www.sportsnetwork.com/> offers an XML feed
13 containing various sports news and statistics. Our sister program
14 \fBhtsn\fR is capable of retrieving the feed and saving the individual
15 XML documents contained therein. But what to do with them?
17 The purpose of \fBhtsn-import\fR is to take these XML documents and
18 get them into something we can use, a relational database management
19 system (RDBMS), otherwise known as a SQL database. The structure of
20 relational database, is, well, relational, and the feed XML is not. So
21 there is some work to do before the data can be imported into the
24 First, we must parse the XML. Each supported document type (see below)
25 has a full pickle/unpickle implementation (\(dqpickle\(dq is simply a
26 synonym for serialize here). That means that we parse the entire
27 document into a data structure, and if we pickle (serialize) that data
28 structure, we get the exact same XML document tha we started with.
30 This is important for two reasons. First, it serves as a second level
31 of validation. The first validation is performed by the XML parser,
32 but if that succeeds and unpicking fails, we know that something is
33 fishy. Second, we don't ever want to be surprised by some new element
34 or attribute showing up in the XML. The fact that we can unpickle the
35 whole thing now means that we won't be surprised in the future.
37 The aforementioned feature is especially important because we
38 automatically migrate the database schema every time we import a
39 document. If you attempt to import a \(dqnewsxml.dtd\(dq document, all
40 database objects relating to the news will be created if they do not
41 exist. We don't want the schema to change out from under us without
42 warning, so it's important that no XML be parsed that would result in
43 a different schema than we had previously. Since we can
44 pickle/unpickle everything already, this should be impossible.
46 .SH SUPPORTED DOCUMENT TYPES
48 The XML document types obtained from the feed are uniquely identified
49 by their DTDs. We currently support documents with the following DTDs:
51 Auto_Racing_Schedule_XML.dtd
55 Injuries_Detail_XML.dtd
76 Matchup_NBA_NHL_XML.dtd
78 MLB_Gaming_Matchup_XML.dtd
88 NBA_Gaming_Matchup_XML.dtd
90 NBA_Playoff_Matchup_XML.dtd
96 NCAA_FB_Preview_XML.dtd
98 NFL_NCAA_FB_Matchup_XML.dtd
106 WorldBaseballPreviewXML.dtd
114 Cbask_All_Tourn_Teams_XML.dtd
123 The GameInfo and SportInfo types do not have their own top-level
124 tables in the database. Instead, their raw XML is stored in either the
125 \(dqgame_info\(dq or \(dqsport_info\(dq table respectively.
129 At the top level (with two notable exceptions), we have one table for
130 each of the XML document types that we import. For example, the
131 documents corresponding to \fInewsxml.dtd\fR will have a table called
132 \(dqnews\(dq. All top-level tables contain two important fields,
133 \(dqxml_file_id\(dq and \(dqtime_stamp\(dq. The former is unique and
134 prevents us from inserting the same data twice. The time stamp on the
135 other hand lets us know when the data is old and can be removed. The
136 database schema make it possible to delete only the outdated top-level
137 records; all transient children should be removed by triggers.
139 These top-level tables will often have children. For example, each
140 news item has zero or more locations associated with it. The child
141 table will be named <parent>_<children>, which in this case
142 corresponds to \(dqnews_locations\(dq.
144 To relate the two, a third table may exist with name
145 <parent>__<child>. Note the two underscores. This prevents ambiguity
146 when the child table itself contains underscores. The table joining
147 \(dqnews\(dq with \(dqnews_locations\(dq is thus called
148 \(dqnews__news_locations\(dq. This is necessary when the child table
149 has a unique constraint; we don't want to blindly insert duplicate
150 records keyed to the parent. Instead we'd like to use the third table
151 to map an existing child to the new parent.
153 Where it makes sense, children are kept unique to prevent pointless
154 duplication. This slows down inserts, and speeds up reads (which are
155 much more frequent). There is a tradeoff to be made, however. For a
156 table with a small, fixed upper bound on the number of rows (like
157 \(dqodds_casinos\(dq), there is great benefit to de-duplication. The
158 total number of rows stays small, so inserts are still quick, and many
159 duplicate rows are eliminated.
161 But, with a table like \(dqodds_games\(dq, the number of games grows
162 quickly and without bound. It is therefore more beneficial to be able
163 to delete the old games (through an ON DELETE CASCADE, tied to
164 \(dqodds\(dq) than it is to eliminate duplication. A table like
165 \(dqnews_locations\(dq is somewhere in-between. It is hoped that the
166 unique constraint in the top-level table's \(dqxml_file_id\(dq will
167 prevent duplication in this case anyway.
169 The aforementioned exceptions are the \(dqgame_info\(dq and
170 \(dqsport_info\(dq tables. These tables contain the raw XML for a
171 number of DTDs that are not handled individually. This is partially
172 for backwards-compatibility with a legacy implementation, but is
173 mostly a stopgap due to a lack of resources at the moment. These two
174 tables (game_info and sport_info) still possess timestamps that allow
175 us to prune old data.
177 UML diagrams of the resulting database schema for each XML document
178 type are provided with the \fBhtsn-import\fR documentation.
180 .SH XML Schema Oddities
182 There are a number of problems with the XML on the wire. Even if we
183 construct the DTDs ourselves, the results are sometimes
184 inconsistent. Here we document a few of them.
189 The <Notes> elements here are supposed to be associated with a set of
190 <Game> elements, but since the pair
191 (<Notes>...</Notes><Game>...</Game>) can appear zero or more times,
192 this leads to ambiguity in parsing. We therefore ignore the notes
193 entirely (although a hack is employed to facilitate parsing).
198 There appear to be two types of weather documents; the first has
199 <listing> contained within <forecast> and the second has <forecast>
200 contained within <listing>. While it would be possible to parse both,
201 it would greatly complicate things. The first form is more common, so
202 that's all we support for now.
206 .IP \fB\-\-backend\fR,\ \fB\-b\fR
207 The RDBMS backend to use. Valid choices are \fISqlite\fR and
208 \fIPostgres\fR. Capitalization is important, sorry.
212 .IP \fB\-\-connection-string\fR,\ \fB\-c\fR
213 The connection string used for connecting to the database backend
214 given by the \fB\-\-backend\fR option. The default is appropriate for
215 the \fISqlite\fR backend.
217 Default: \(dq:memory:\(dq
219 .IP \fB\-\-log-file\fR
220 If you specify a file here, logs will be written to it (possibly in
221 addition to syslog). Can be either a relative or absolute path. It
222 will not be auto-rotated; use something like logrotate for that.
226 .IP \fB\-\-log-level\fR
227 How verbose should the logs be? We log notifications at four levels:
228 DEBUG, INFO, WARN, and ERROR. Specify the \(dqmost boring\(dq level of
229 notifications you would like to receive (in all-caps); more
230 interesting notifications will be logged as well. The debug output is
231 extremely verbose and will not be written to syslog even if you try.
235 .IP \fB\-\-remove\fR,\ \fB\-r\fR
236 Remove successfully processed files. If you enable this, you can see
237 at a glance which XML files are not being processed, because they're
238 all that should be left.
242 .IP \fB\-\-syslog\fR,\ \fB\-s\fR
243 Enable logging to syslog. On Windows this will attempt to communicate
244 (over UDP) with a syslog daemon on localhost, which will most likely
249 .SH CONFIGURATION FILE
251 Any of the command-line options mentioned above can be specified in a
252 configuration file instead. We first look for \(dqhtsn-importrc\(dq in
253 the system configuration directory. We then look for a file named
254 \(dq.htsn-importrc\(dq in the user's home directory. The latter will
257 The user's home directory is simply $HOME on Unix; on Windows it's
258 wherever %APPDATA% points. The system configuration directory is
259 determined by Cabal; the \(dqsysconfdir\(dq parameter during the
260 \(dqconfigure\(dq step is used.
262 The file's syntax is given by examples in the htsn-importrc.example file
263 (included with \fBhtsn-import\fR).
265 Options specified on the command-line override those in either
270 Import newsxml.xml into a preexisting sqlite database named \(dqfoo.sqlite3\(dq:
273 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
274 .I " test/xml/newsxml.xml"
275 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
276 Imported 1 document(s) total.
279 Repeat the previous example, but delete newsxml.xml afterwards:
282 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
283 .I " --remove test/xml/newsxml.xml"
284 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
285 Imported 1 document(s) total.
286 Removed processed file test/xml/newsxml.xml.
289 Use a Postgres database instead of the default Sqlite. This assumes
290 that you have a database named \(dqhtsn\(dq accessible to user
291 \(dqpostgres\(dq locally:
294 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='dbname=htsn user=postgres' \\\\
295 .I " --backend=Postgres test/xml/newsxml.xml"
296 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
297 Imported 1 document(s) total.
303 Send bugs to michael@orlitzky.com.