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1 .TH htsn-import 1
2
3 .SH NAME
4 htsn-import \- Import XML files from The Sports Network into an RDBMS.
5
6 .SH SYNOPSIS
7
8 \fBhtsn-import\fR [OPTIONS] [FILES]
9
10 .SH DESCRIPTION
11 .P
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?
16 .P
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
22 database.
23 .P
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 \(dqserialize\(dq here). That means that we parse the
27 entire document into a data structure, and if we pickle (serialize)
28 that data structure, we get the exact same XML document tha we started
29 with.
30 .P
31 This is important for two reasons. First, it serves as a second level
32 of validation. The first validation is performed by the XML parser,
33 but if that succeeds and unpicking fails, we know that something is
34 fishy. Second, we don't ever want to be surprised by some new element
35 or attribute showing up in the XML. The fact that we can unpickle the
36 whole thing now means that we won't be surprised in the future.
37 .P
38 The aforementioned feature is especially important because we
39 automatically migrate the database schema every time we import a
40 document. If you attempt to import a \(dqnewsxml.dtd\(dq document, all
41 database objects relating to the news will be created if they do not
42 exist. We don't want the schema to change out from under us without
43 warning, so it's important that no XML be parsed that would result in
44 a different schema than we had previously. Since we can
45 pickle/unpickle everything already, this should be impossible.
46 .P
47 A list of supported document types is given in the appendix.
48 .P
49 The GameInfo and SportInfo types do not have their own top-level
50 tables in the database. Instead, their raw XML is stored in either the
51 \(dqgame_info\(dq or \(dqsport_info\(dq table respectively.
52
53 .SH DATABASE SCHEMA
54 .P
55 At the top level (with two notable exceptions), we have one table for
56 each of the XML document types that we import. For example, the
57 documents corresponding to \fInewsxml.dtd\fR will have a table called
58 \(dqnews\(dq. All top-level tables contain two important fields,
59 \(dqxml_file_id\(dq and \(dqtime_stamp\(dq. The former is unique and
60 prevents us from inserting the same data twice. The time stamp on the
61 other hand lets us know when the data is old and can be removed. The
62 database schema make it possible to delete only the outdated top-level
63 records; all transient children should be removed by triggers.
64 .P
65 These top-level tables will often have children. For example, each
66 news item has zero or more locations associated with it. The child
67 table will be named <parent>_<children>, which in this case
68 corresponds to \(dqnews_locations\(dq.
69 .P
70 To relate the two, a third table may exist with name
71 <parent>__<child>. Note the two underscores. This prevents ambiguity
72 when the child table itself contains underscores. The table joining
73 \(dqnews\(dq with \(dqnews_locations\(dq is thus called
74 \(dqnews__news_locations\(dq. This is necessary when the child table
75 has a unique constraint; we don't want to blindly insert duplicate
76 records keyed to the parent. Instead we'd like to use the third table
77 to map an existing child to the new parent.
78 .P
79 Where it makes sense, children are kept unique to prevent pointless
80 duplication. This slows down inserts, and speeds up reads (which are
81 much more frequent). There is a tradeoff to be made, however. For a
82 table with a small, fixed upper bound on the number of rows (like
83 \(dqodds_casinos\(dq), there is great benefit to de-duplication. The
84 total number of rows stays small, so inserts are still quick, and many
85 duplicate rows are eliminated.
86 .P
87 But, with a table like \(dqodds_games\(dq, the number of games grows
88 quickly and without bound. It is therefore more beneficial to be able
89 to delete the old games (through an ON DELETE CASCADE, tied to
90 \(dqodds\(dq) than it is to eliminate duplication. A table like
91 \(dqnews_locations\(dq is somewhere in-between. It is hoped that the
92 unique constraint in the top-level table's \(dqxml_file_id\(dq will
93 prevent duplication in this case anyway.
94 .P
95 The aforementioned exceptions are the \(dqgame_info\(dq and
96 \(dqsport_info\(dq tables. These tables contain the raw XML for a
97 number of DTDs that are not handled individually. This is partially
98 for backwards-compatibility with a legacy implementation, but is
99 mostly a stopgap due to a lack of resources at the moment. These two
100 tables (game_info and sport_info) still possess timestamps that allow
101 us to prune old data.
102 .P
103 UML diagrams of the resulting database schema for each XML document
104 type are provided with the \fBhtsn-import\fR documentation, in the
105 \fIdoc/dbschema\fR directory. These are not authoritative, but it
106 should be considered a bug if they are incorrect. The diagrams are
107 created using the pgModeler <http://www.pgmodeler.com.br/> tool.
108
109 .SH NULL POLICY
110 .P
111 Normally in a database one makes a distinction between fields that
112 simply don't exist, and those fields that are
113 \(dqempty\(dq. Translating from XML, there is a natural way to
114 determine which one should be used: if an element is present in the
115 XML document but its contents are empty, then an empty string should
116 be inserted into the corresponding field. If on the other hand the
117 element is missing entirely, the corresponding database entry should
118 be NULL to indicate that fact.
119 .P
120 This sounds well and good, but the XML must be consistent for the
121 database consumer to make any sense of what he sees. The feed XML uses
122 optional and blank elements interchangeably, and without any
123 discernable pattern. To propagate this pattern into the database would
124 only cause confusion.
125 .P
126 As a result, a policy was adopted: both optional elements and elements
127 whose contents can be empty will be considered nullable in the
128 database. If the element is missing, the corresponding field is
129 NULL. Likewise if the content is simply missing. That means there
130 should never be a (completely) empty string in a database column.
131
132 .SH XML SCHEMA GENERATION
133 .P
134 In order to parse XML, you need to know the structure of your
135 documents. Usually this is given in the form of a DTD or schema. The
136 Sports Network does provide DTDs for their XML, but unfortunately many
137 of them do not match the XML found on the feed.
138 .P
139 We need to construct a database into which to insert the XML. How do
140 we know if <game> should be a column, or if it should have its own
141 table? We need to know how many times it can appear in the
142 document. So we need some form of specification. Since the supplied
143 DTDs are incorrect, we would like to generate them automatically.
144 .P
145 The process should go something like,
146 .IP 1.
147 Generate a DTD from the first foo.xml file we see. Call it foo.dtd.
148 .IP 2.
149 Validate future foo documents against foo.dtd. If they all validate,
150 great. If one fails, add it to the corpus and update foo.dtd so
151 that both the original and the new foo.xml validate.
152 .IP 3.
153 Repeat until no more failures occur. This can never be perfect:
154 tomorrow we could get a foo.xml that's wildly different from what
155 we've seen in the past. But it's the best we can hope for under
156 the circumstances.
157 .P
158 Enter XML-Schema-learner
159 <https://github.com/kore/XML-Schema-learner>. This tool can infer a
160 DTD from a set of sample XML files. The top-level \(dqschemagen\(dq
161 folder (in this project) contains a number of subfolders\(emone for
162 each type of document that we want to parse. Contained therein are XML
163 samples for that particular document type. These were hand-picked one
164 at a time according to the procedure above, and the complete set of
165 XML is what we use to generate the DTDs used by htsn-import.
166 .P
167 To generate them, run `make schema` at the project
168 root. XML-Schema-learner will be invoked on each subfolder of
169 \(dqschemagen\(dq and will output the corresponding DTDs to the
170 \(dqschemagen\(dq folder.
171 .P
172 Most of the production schemas are generated this way; however, a few
173 needed manual tweaking. The final, believed-to-be-correct schemas for
174 all supported document types can be found in the \(dqschema\(dq folder in
175 the project root. Having the correct DTDs available means you
176 don't need XML-Schema-learner available to install \fBhtsn-import\fR.
177
178 .SH XML SCHEMA UPDATES
179 .P
180 If a new tag is added to an XML document type, \fBhtsn-import\fR will
181 most likely refuse to parse it, since the new documents no longer
182 match the existing DTD.
183 .P
184 The first thing to do in that case is add the unparseable document to
185 the \(dqschemagen\(dq directory, and generate a new DTD that matches
186 both the old and new samples. Once a new, correct DTD has been
187 generated, it should be added to the \(dqschema\(dq directory. Then,
188 the parser can be updated and \fBhtsn-import\fR rebuilt.
189 .P
190 At this point, \fBhtsn-import\fR should be capable of importing the
191 new document. But the addition of the new tag will most require new
192 fields in the database. Fortunately, easy migrations like this are
193 handled automatically. As an example, at one point, \fIOdds_XML.dtd\fR
194 did not contain the \(dqHStarter\(dq and \(dqAStarter\(dq elements
195 associated with its games. Suppose we parse one of the old documents
196 (without \(dqHStarter\(dq and \(dqAStarter\(dq) using an old version
197 of \fBhtsn-import\fR:
198 .P
199 .nf
200 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
201 .I " schemagen/Odds_XML/19996433.xml"
202 Migration: CREATE TABLE \(dqodds\(dq ...
203 Successfully imported schemagen/Odds_XML/19996433.xml.
204 Processed 1 document(s) total.
205 .fi
206 .P
207 At this point, the database schema matches the old documents, i.e. the
208 ones without \fIAStarter\fR and \fIHStarter\fR. If we use a new
209 version of \fBhtsn-import\fR, supporting the new fields, the migration
210 is handled gracefully:
211 .P
212 .nf
213 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
214 .I " schemagen/Odds_XML/21315768.xml"
215 Migration: ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq
216 ADD COLUMN \(dqaway_team_starter_id\(dq INTEGER;
217 Migration: ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq
218 ADD COLUMN \(dqaway_team_starter_name\(dq VARCHAR;
219 Migration: ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq
220 ADD COLUMN \(dqhome_team_starter_id\(dq INTEGER;
221 Migration: ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq
222 ADD COLUMN \(dqhome_team_starter_name\(dq VARCHAR;
223 Successfully imported schemagen/Odds_XML/21315768.xml.
224 Processed 1 document(s) total.
225 .fi
226 .P
227 If fields are removed from the schema, then manual intervention may be
228 necessary:
229 .P
230 .nf
231 .I $ htsn-import -b Postgres -c 'dbname=htsn user=postgres' \\\\
232 .I " schemagen/Odds_XML/19996433.xml"
233 ERROR: Database migration: manual intervention required.
234 The following actions are considered unsafe:
235 ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq DROP COLUMN \(dqaway_team_starter_id\(dq
236 ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq DROP COLUMN \(dqaway_team_starter_name\(dq
237 ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq DROP COLUMN \(dqhome_team_starter_id\(dq
238 ALTER TABLE \(dqodds_games\(dq DROP COLUMN \(dqhome_team_starter_name\(dq
239
240 ERROR: Failed to import file schemagen/Odds_XML/19996433.xml.
241 Processed 0 document(s) total.
242 .fi
243 .P
244 To fix these errors, manually invoke the SQL commands that were
245 considered unsafe:
246 .P
247 .nf
248 .I $ psql -U postgres -d htsn \\\\
249 .I " -c 'ALTER TABLE odds_games DROP COLUMN away_team_starter_id;'"
250 ALTER TABLE
251 .I $ psql -U postgres -d htsn \\\\
252 .I " -c 'ALTER TABLE odds_games DROP COLUMN away_team_starter_name;'"
253 ALTER TABLE
254 .I $ psql -U postgres -d htsn \\\\
255 .I " -c 'ALTER TABLE odds_games DROP COLUMN home_team_starter_id;'"
256 ALTER TABLE
257 .I $ psql -U postgres -d htsn \\\\
258 .I " -c 'ALTER TABLE odds_games DROP COLUMN home_team_starter_name;'"
259 ALTER TABLE
260 .fi
261 .P
262 After manually adjusting the schema, the import should succeed.
263
264 .SH XML SCHEMA ODDITIES
265 .P
266 There are a number of problems with the XML on the wire. Even if we
267 construct the DTDs ourselves, the results are sometimes
268 inconsistent. Here we document a few of them.
269
270 .IP \[bu] 2
271 \fInewsxml.dtd\fR
272
273 The TSN DTD for news (and almost all XML on the wire) suggests that
274 there is a exactly one (possibly-empty) <SMS> element present in each
275 message. However, we have seen an example (XML_File_ID 21232353) where
276 an empty <SMS> followed a non-empty one:
277
278 .fi
279 <SMS>Odd Man Rush: Snow under pressure to improve Isles quickly</SMS>
280 <SMS></SMS>
281 .nf
282
283 We don't parse this case at the moment, but we do recognize it and report
284 it as unsupported so that offending documents can be removed. An example
285 is provided as test/xml/newsxml-multiple-sms.xml.
286
287 .IP \[bu]
288 \fIOdds_XML.dtd\fR
289
290 The <Notes> elements here are supposed to be associated with a set of
291 <Game> elements, but since the pair
292 (<Notes>...</Notes><Game>...</Game>) can appear zero or more times,
293 this leads to ambiguity in parsing. We therefore ignore the notes
294 entirely (although a hack is employed to facilitate parsing). The same
295 thing goes for the newer <League_Name> element.
296
297 .IP \[bu]
298 \fIweatherxml.dtd\fR
299
300 There appear to be two types of weather documents; the first has
301 <listing> contained within <forecast> and the second has <forecast>
302 contained within <listing>. While it would be possible to parse both,
303 it would greatly complicate things. The first form is more common, so
304 that's all we support for now. An example is provided as
305 test/xml/weatherxml-type2.xml.
306
307 We are however able to identify the second type. When one is
308 encountered, an informational message (that it is unsupported) will be
309 printed. If the \fI\-\-remove\fR flag is used, the file will be
310 deleted. This prevents documents that we know we can't import from
311 building up.
312
313 Another problem that comes up occasionally is that the home and away
314 team elements appear in the reverse order. As in the other case, we
315 report these as unsupported and then \(dqsucceed\(dq so that the
316 offending document can be removed if desired. An example is provided
317 as test/xml/weatherxml-backwards-teams.xml.
318
319 .SH DATE/TIME ISSUES
320
321 Dates and times appear in a number of places on the feed. The date
322 portions are usually, fine, but the times often lack important
323 information such as the time zone, or whether \(dq8 o'clock\(dq means
324 a.m. or p.m.
325
326 The most pervasive issue occurs with the timestamps that are included
327 in every message. A typical timestamp looks like,
328
329 .nf
330 <time_stamp> May 24, 2014, at 04:18 PM ET </time_stamp>
331 .fi
332
333 The \(dqtime zone\(dq is given as \(dqET\(dq, but unfortunately
334 \(dqET\(dq is not a valid time zone. It stands for \(dqEastern
335 Time\(dq, which can belong to either of two time zones, EST or EDT,
336 based on the time of the year (i.e. whether or not daylight savings
337 time is in effect). Since we can't tell from the timestamp, we always
338 parse these as EST which is UTC-5. When daylight savings is in effect,
339 they will be off by an hour.
340
341 Here's a list of the ones that may cause surprises:
342
343 .IP \[bu] 2
344 \fIAutoRacingResultsXML.dtd\fR
345
346 The <RaceDate> elements contain a full date and time, but no time zone
347 information:
348
349 .nf
350 <RaceDate>5/24/2014 2:45:00 PM</RaceDate>
351 .fi
352
353 We parse them as UTC, which will be wrong when stored,
354 but \(dqcorrect\(dq if the new UTC time zone is ignored.
355
356 .IP \[bu]
357 \fIAuto_Racing_Schedule_XML.dtd\fR
358
359 The <Race_Date> and <Race_Time> elements are combined into on field in
360 the database, but no time zone information is given. For example,
361
362 .nf
363 <Race_Date>02/16/2013</Race_Date>
364 <Race_Time>08:10 PM</Race_Time>
365 .fi
366
367 As a result, we parse and store the times as UTC. The race times are
368 not always present in the database, but when they are missing, they
369 are presented as \(dqTBA\(dq (to be announced):
370
371 .nf
372 <Race_Time>TBA</Race_Time>
373 .fi
374
375 Since the dates do not appear to be optional, we store only the race
376 date in that case.
377
378 .IP \[bu]
379 \fIearlylineXML.dtd\fR
380
381 The <time> elements in the early lines contain neither a time zone nor
382 an am/pm identifier:
383
384 .nf
385 <time>8:30</time>
386 .fi
387
388 The times are parsed and stored as UTC, since we
389 don't have any other information upon which to base a guess. Even if
390 one ignores the UTC time zone, the time can possibly be off by 12
391 hours (due to the a.m./p.m. issue).
392
393 .IP \[bu]
394 \fIjfilexml.dtd\fR
395
396 The <Game_Date> and <Game_Time> elements are combined into on field in
397 the database, but no time zone information is given. For example,
398
399 .nf
400 <Game_Date>06/15/2014</Game_Date>
401 <Game_Time>08:00 PM</Game_Time>
402 .fi
403
404 As a result, we parse and store the times as UTC.
405
406 The <CurrentTimestamp> elements suffer a similar problem, sans the
407 date:
408
409 .nf
410 <CurrentTimeStamp>11:30 A.M.</CurrentTimeStamp>
411 .fi
412
413 They are also stored as UTC.
414
415 .IP \[bu]
416 \fIOdds_XML.dtd\fR
417
418 The <Game_Date> and <Game_Time> elements are combined into on field in
419 the database, but no time zone information is given. For example,
420
421 .nf
422 <Game_Date>01/04/2014</Game_Date>
423 <Game_Time>04:35 PM</Game_Time>
424 .fi
425
426 As a result, we parse and store the times as UTC.
427
428 .IP \[bu]
429 \fISchedule_Changes_XML.dtd\fR
430
431 The <Game_Date> and <Game_Time> elements are combined into on field in
432 the database, but no time zone information is given. For example,
433
434 .nf
435 <Game_Date>06/06/2014</Game_Date>
436 <Game_Time>04:00 PM</Game_Time>
437 .fi
438
439 As a result, we parse and store the times as UTC. The game times are
440 not always present in the database, but when they are missing, they
441 are presented as \(dqTBA\(dq (to be announced):
442
443 .nf
444 <Game_Time>TBA</Game_Time>
445 .fi
446
447 Since the dates do not appear to be optional, we store only the game
448 date in that case.
449
450 .SH DEPLOYMENT
451 .P
452 When deploying for the first time, the target database will most
453 likely be empty. The schema will be migrated when a new document type
454 is seen, but this has a downside: it can be months before every
455 supported document type has been seen once. This can make it difficult
456 to test the database permissions.
457 .P
458 Since all of the test XML documents have old timestamps, one easy
459 workaround is the following: simply import all of the test XML
460 documents, and then delete them using whatever script is used to prune
461 old entries. This will force the migration of the schema, after which
462 you can set and test the database permissions.
463 .P
464 Something as simple as,
465 .P
466 .nf
467 .I $ find ./test/xml -iname '*.xml' | xargs htsn-import -c foo.sqlite
468 .fi
469 .P
470 should do it.
471
472 .SH OPTIONS
473
474 .IP \fB\-\-backend\fR,\ \fB\-b\fR
475 The RDBMS backend to use. Valid choices are \fISqlite\fR and
476 \fIPostgres\fR. Capitalization is important, sorry.
477
478 Default: Sqlite
479
480 .IP \fB\-\-connection-string\fR,\ \fB\-c\fR
481 The connection string used for connecting to the database backend
482 given by the \fB\-\-backend\fR option. The default is appropriate for
483 the \fISqlite\fR backend.
484
485 Default: \(dq:memory:\(dq
486
487 .IP \fB\-\-log-file\fR
488 If you specify a file here, logs will be written to it (possibly in
489 addition to syslog). Can be either a relative or absolute path. It
490 will not be auto-rotated; use something like logrotate for that.
491
492 Default: none
493
494 .IP \fB\-\-log-level\fR
495 How verbose should the logs be? We log notifications at four levels:
496 DEBUG, INFO, WARN, and ERROR. Specify the \(dqmost boring\(dq level of
497 notifications you would like to receive (in all-caps); more
498 interesting notifications will be logged as well. The debug output is
499 extremely verbose and will not be written to syslog even if you try.
500
501 Default: INFO
502
503 .IP \fB\-\-remove\fR,\ \fB\-r\fR
504 Remove successfully processed files. If you enable this, you can see
505 at a glance which XML files are not being processed, because they're
506 all that should be left.
507
508 Default: disabled
509
510 .IP \fB\-\-syslog\fR,\ \fB\-s\fR
511 Enable logging to syslog. On Windows this will attempt to communicate
512 (over UDP) with a syslog daemon on localhost, which will most likely
513 not work.
514
515 Default: disabled
516
517 .SH CONFIGURATION FILE
518 .P
519 Any of the command-line options mentioned above can be specified in a
520 configuration file instead. We first look for \(dqhtsn-importrc\(dq in
521 the system configuration directory. We then look for a file named
522 \(dq.htsn-importrc\(dq in the user's home directory. The latter will
523 override the former.
524 .P
525 The user's home directory is simply $HOME on Unix; on Windows it's
526 wherever %APPDATA% points. The system configuration directory is
527 determined by Cabal; the \(dqsysconfdir\(dq parameter during the
528 \(dqconfigure\(dq step is used.
529 .P
530 The file's syntax is given by examples in the htsn-importrc.example file
531 (included with \fBhtsn-import\fR).
532 .P
533 Options specified on the command-line override those in either
534 configuration file.
535
536 .SH EXAMPLES
537 .IP \[bu] 2
538 Import newsxml.xml into a preexisting sqlite database named \(dqfoo.sqlite3\(dq:
539
540 .nf
541 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
542 .I " test/xml/newsxml.xml"
543 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
544 Imported 1 document(s) total.
545 .fi
546 .IP \[bu]
547 Repeat the previous example, but delete newsxml.xml afterwards:
548
549 .nf
550 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='foo.sqlite3' \\\\
551 .I " --remove test/xml/newsxml.xml"
552 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
553 Imported 1 document(s) total.
554 Removed processed file test/xml/newsxml.xml.
555 .fi
556 .IP \[bu]
557 Use a Postgres database instead of the default Sqlite. This assumes
558 that you have a database named \(dqhtsn\(dq accessible to user
559 \(dqpostgres\(dq locally:
560
561 .nf
562 .I $ htsn-import --connection-string='dbname=htsn user=postgres' \\\\
563 .I " --backend=Postgres test/xml/newsxml.xml"
564 Successfully imported test/xml/newsxml.xml.
565 Imported 1 document(s) total.
566 .fi
567
568 .SH BUGS
569
570 .P
571 Send bugs to michael@orlitzky.com.
572
573 .SH APPENDIX: SUPPORTED DOCUMENT TYPES
574 .P
575 The XML document types obtained from the feed are uniquely identified
576 by their DTDs. We currently support documents with the following DTDs:
577 .IP \[bu] 2
578 AutoRacingResultsXML.dtd
579 .IP \[bu]
580 Auto_Racing_Schedule_XML.dtd
581 .IP \[bu]
582 Heartbeat.dtd
583 .IP \[bu]
584 Injuries_Detail_XML.dtd
585 .IP \[bu]
586 injuriesxml.dtd
587 .IP \[bu]
588 jfilexml.dtd
589 .IP \[bu]
590 newsxml.dtd
591 .IP \[bu]
592 Odds_XML.dtd
593 .IP \[bu]
594 Schedule_Changes_XML.dtd
595 .IP \[bu]
596 scoresxml.dtd
597 .IP \[bu]
598 weatherxml.dtd
599 .IP \[bu]
600 GameInfo
601 .RS
602 .IP \[bu] 2
603 CBASK_Lineup_XML.dtd
604 .IP \[bu]
605 cbaskpreviewxml.dtd
606 .IP \[bu]
607 cflpreviewxml.dtd
608 .IP \[bu]
609 Matchup_NBA_NHL_XML.dtd
610 .IP \[bu]
611 MLB_Fielding_XML.dtd
612 .IP \[bu]
613 MLB_Gaming_Matchup_XML.dtd
614 .IP \[bu]
615 MLB_Lineup_XML.dtd
616 .IP \[bu]
617 MLB_Matchup_XML.dtd
618 .IP \[bu]
619 MLS_Preview_XML.dtd
620 .IP \[bu]
621 mlbpreviewxml.dtd
622 .IP \[bu]
623 NBA_Gaming_Matchup_XML.dtd
624 .IP \[bu]
625 NBA_Playoff_Matchup_XML.dtd
626 .IP \[bu]
627 NBALineupXML.dtd
628 .IP \[bu]
629 nbapreviewxml.dtd
630 .IP \[bu]
631 NCAA_FB_Preview_XML.dtd
632 .IP \[bu]
633 NFL_NCAA_FB_Matchup_XML.dtd
634 .IP \[bu]
635 nflpreviewxml.dtd
636 .IP \[bu]
637 nhlpreviewxml.dtd
638 .IP \[bu]
639 recapxml.dtd
640 .IP \[bu]
641 WorldBaseballPreviewXML.dtd
642 .RE
643 .IP \[bu]
644 SportInfo
645 .RS
646 .IP \[bu] 2
647 CBASK_3PPctXML.dtd
648 .IP \[bu]
649 Cbask_All_Tourn_Teams_XML.dtd
650 .IP \[bu]
651 CBASK_AssistsXML.dtd
652 .IP \[bu]
653 Cbask_Awards_XML.dtd
654 .IP \[bu]
655 CBASK_BlocksXML.dtd
656 .IP \[bu]
657 Cbask_Conf_Standings_XML.dtd
658 .IP \[bu]
659 Cbask_DivII_III_Indv_Stats_XML.dtd
660 .IP \[bu]
661 Cbask_DivII_Team_Stats_XML.dtd
662 .IP \[bu]
663 Cbask_DivIII_Team_Stats_XML.dtd
664 .IP \[bu]
665 CBASK_FGPctXML.dtd
666 .IP \[bu]
667 CBASK_FoulsXML.dtd
668 .IP \[bu]
669 CBASK_FTPctXML.dtd
670 .IP \[bu]
671 Cbask_Indv_Scoring_XML.dtd
672 .IP \[bu]
673 CBASK_MinutesXML.dtd
674 .IP \[bu]
675 Cbask_Polls_XML.dtd
676 .IP \[bu]
677 CBASK_ReboundsXML.dtd
678 .IP \[bu]
679 CBASK_ScoringLeadersXML.dtd
680 .IP \[bu]
681 Cbask_Team_ThreePT_Made_XML.dtd
682 .IP \[bu]
683 Cbask_Team_ThreePT_PCT_XML.dtd
684 .IP \[bu]
685 Cbask_Team_Win_Pct_XML.dtd
686 .IP \[bu]
687 Cbask_Top_Twenty_Five_XML.dtd
688 .IP \[bu]
689 CBASK_TopTwentyFiveResult_XML.dtd
690 .IP \[bu]
691 Cbask_Tourn_Awards_XML.dtd
692 .IP \[bu]
693 Cbask_Tourn_Champs_XML.dtd
694 .IP \[bu]
695 Cbask_Tourn_Indiv_XML.dtd
696 .IP \[bu]
697 Cbask_Tourn_Leaders_XML.dtd
698 .IP \[bu]
699 Cbask_Tourn_MVP_XML.dtd
700 .IP \[bu]
701 Cbask_Tourn_Records_XML.dtd
702 .IP \[bu]
703 LeagueScheduleXML.dtd
704 .IP \[bu]
705 minorscoresxml.dtd
706 .IP \[bu]
707 Minor_Baseball_League_Leaders_XML.dtd
708 .IP \[bu]
709 Minor_Baseball_Standings_XML.dtd
710 .IP \[bu]
711 Minor_Baseball_Transactions_XML.dtd
712 .IP \[bu]
713 mlbbattingavgxml.dtd
714 .IP \[bu]
715 mlbdoublesleadersxml.dtd
716 .IP \[bu]
717 MLBGamesPlayedXML.dtd
718 .IP \[bu]
719 MLBGIDPXML.dtd
720 .IP \[bu]
721 MLBHitByPitchXML.dtd
722 .IP \[bu]
723 mlbhitsleadersxml.dtd
724 .IP \[bu]
725 mlbhomerunsxml.dtd
726 .IP \[bu]
727 MLBHRFreqXML.dtd
728 .IP \[bu]
729 MLBIntWalksXML.dtd
730 .IP \[bu]
731 MLBKORateXML.dtd
732 .IP \[bu]
733 mlbonbasepctxml.dtd
734 .IP \[bu]
735 MLBOPSXML.dtd
736 .IP \[bu]
737 MLBPlateAppsXML.dtd
738 .IP \[bu]
739 mlbrbisxml.dtd
740 .IP \[bu]
741 mlbrunsleadersxml.dtd
742 .IP \[bu]
743 MLBSacFliesXML.dtd
744 .IP \[bu]
745 MLBSacrificesXML.dtd
746 .IP \[bu]
747 MLBSBSuccessXML.dtd
748 .IP \[bu]
749 mlbsluggingpctxml.dtd
750 .IP \[bu]
751 mlbstandxml.dtd
752 .IP \[bu]
753 mlbstandxml_preseason.dtd
754 .IP \[bu]
755 mlbstolenbasexml.dtd
756 .IP \[bu]
757 mlbtotalbasesleadersxml.dtd
758 .IP \[bu]
759 mlbtriplesleadersxml.dtd
760 .IP \[bu]
761 MLBWalkRateXML.dtd
762 .IP \[bu]
763 mlbwalksleadersxml.dtd
764 .IP \[bu]
765 MLBXtraBaseHitsXML.dtd
766 .IP \[bu]
767 MLB_Pitching_Appearances_Leaders.dtd
768 .IP \[bu]
769 MLB_ERA_Leaders.dtd
770 .IP \[bu]
771 MLB_Pitching_Balks_Leaders.dtd
772 .IP \[bu]
773 MLB_Pitching_CG_Leaders.dtd
774 .IP \[bu]
775 MLB_Pitching_ER_Allowed_Leaders.dtd
776 .IP \[bu]
777 MLB_Pitching_Hits_Allowed_Leaders.dtd
778 .IP \[bu]
779 MLB_Pitching_Hit_Batters_Leaders.dtd
780 .IP \[bu]
781 MLB_Pitching_HR_Allowed_Leaders.dtd
782 .IP \[bu]
783 MLB_Pitching_IP_Leaders.dtd
784 .IP \[bu]
785 MLB_Pitching_Runs_Allowed_Leaders.dtd
786 .IP \[bu]
787 MLB_Pitching_Saves_Leaders.dtd
788 .IP \[bu]
789 MLB_Pitching_Shut_Outs_Leaders.dtd
790 .IP \[bu]
791 MLB_Pitching_Starts_Leaders.dtd
792 .IP \[bu]
793 MLB_Pitching_Strike_Outs_Leaders.dtd
794 .IP \[bu]
795 MLB_Pitching_Walks_Leaders.dtd
796 .IP \[bu]
797 MLB_Pitching_WHIP_Leaders.dtd
798 .IP \[bu]
799 MLB_Pitching_Wild_Pitches_Leaders.dtd
800 .IP \[bu]
801 MLB_Pitching_Win_Percentage_Leaders.dtd
802 .IP \[bu]
803 MLB_Pitching_WL_Leaders.dtd
804 .IP \[bu]
805 NBA_Team_Stats_XML.dtd
806 .IP \[bu]
807 NBA3PPctXML.dtd
808 .IP \[bu]
809 NBAAssistsXML.dtd
810 .IP \[bu]
811 NBABlocksXML.dtd
812 .IP \[bu]
813 nbaconfrecxml.dtd
814 .IP \[bu]
815 nbadaysxml.dtd
816 .IP \[bu]
817 nbadivisionsxml.dtd
818 .IP \[bu]
819 NBAFGPctXML.dtd
820 .IP \[bu]
821 NBAFoulsXML.dtd
822 .IP \[bu]
823 NBAFTPctXML.dtd
824 .IP \[bu]
825 NBAMinutesXML.dtd
826 .IP \[bu]
827 NBAReboundsXML.dtd
828 .IP \[bu]
829 NBAScorersXML.dtd
830 .IP \[bu]
831 nbastandxml.dtd
832 .IP \[bu]
833 NBAStealsXML.dtd
834 .IP \[bu]
835 nbateamleadersxml.dtd
836 .IP \[bu]
837 nbatripledoublexml.dtd
838 .IP \[bu]
839 NBATurnoversXML.dtd
840 .IP \[bu]
841 NCAA_Conference_Schedule_XML.dtd
842 .IP \[bu]
843 nflfirstdownxml.dtd
844 .IP \[bu]
845 NFLFumbleLeaderXML.dtd
846 .IP \[bu]
847 NFLGiveTakeXML.dtd
848 .IP \[bu]
849 NFLInside20XML.dtd
850 .IP \[bu]
851 NFLKickoffsXML.dtd
852 .IP \[bu]
853 NFLMondayNightXML.dtd
854 .IP \[bu]
855 NFLPassLeadXML.dtd
856 .IP \[bu]
857 NFLQBStartsXML.dtd
858 .IP \[bu]
859 NFLSackLeadersXML.dtd
860 .IP \[bu]
861 nflstandxml.dtd
862 .IP \[bu]
863 NFLTeamRankingsXML.dtd
864 .IP \[bu]
865 NFLTopPerformanceXML.dtd
866 .IP \[bu]
867 NFLTotalYardageXML.dtd
868 .IP \[bu]
869 NFL_KickingLeaders_XML.dtd
870 .IP \[bu]
871 NFL_NBA_Draft_XML.dtd
872 .IP \[bu]
873 NFL_Roster_XML.dtd
874 .IP \[bu]
875 NFL_Team_Stats_XML.dtd
876 .IP \[bu]
877 Transactions_XML.dtd
878 .IP \[bu]
879 Weekly_Sched_XML.dtd
880 .IP \[bu]
881 WNBA_Team_Leaders_XML.dtd
882 .IP \[bu]
883 WNBA3PPctXML.dtd
884 .IP \[bu]
885 WNBAAssistsXML.dtd
886 .IP \[bu]
887 WNBABlocksXML.dtd
888 .IP \[bu]
889 WNBAFGPctXML.dtd
890 .IP \[bu]
891 WNBAFoulsXML.dtd
892 .IP \[bu]
893 WNBAFTPctXML.dtd
894 .IP \[bu]
895 WNBAMinutesXML.dtd
896 .IP \[bu]
897 WNBAReboundsXML.dtd
898 .IP \[bu]
899 WNBAScorersXML.dtd
900 .IP \[bu]
901 wnbastandxml.dtd
902 .IP \[bu]
903 WNBAStealsXML.dtd
904 .IP \[bu]
905 WNBATurnoversXML.dtd
906 .RE