6.4. Discussion Forums Data#

EdX discussion data is stored as collections of JSON documents in a MongoDB database. MongoDB is a document-oriented, NoSQL database system. Documentation can be found at the mongodb web site.

6.4.1. Data File and Object Overview#

In the data package, discussion data is delivered in a .mongo file, identified by organization and course, in the format {org}-{course}-{run}-{site}.mongo.

The primary collection that holds all of the discussion posts written by users is “contents”. Two different types of objects are stored, representing the three levels of interactions that users can have in a discussion.

  • A CommentThread represents the first level of interaction: a post that opens a new thread, often a student question of some sort.

  • A Comment represents both the second and third levels of interaction: a response made directly to the conversation started by a CommentThread is a Comment. Any further contributions made to a specific response are also in Comment objects.

A sample of the field/value pairs that are in the .mongo file, and descriptions of the attributes that these two types of objects share and that are specific to each type, follow.

In addition to these collections, events are also emitted to track specific user activities. For more information, see Discussion Forum Events.

6.4.2. Samples#

Two sample rows, or JSON documents, from a .mongo file of discussion data follow.

6.4.2.1. CommentThread Document Example#

The JSON documents that include discussion data are delivered in a compact, machine-readable format that can be difficult to read at a glance.

{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "50f1dd4ae05f6d2600000001" }, "_type" : "CommentThread",
"anonymous" :false, "anonymous_to_peers" : false, "at_position_list" : [],
"author_id" : "NNNNNNN","author_username" : "AAAAAAAAAA", "body" : "Welcome to
the edX101 forum!\n\nThis forum willbe regularly monitored by edX. Please post
your questions and comments here. When asking aquestion, don't forget to
search the forum to check whether your question has already
beenanswered.\n\n", "closed" : false, "comment_count" : 0, "commentable_id" :
"i4x-edX-edX101-course-How_to_Create_an_edX_Course", "course_id" :
"edX/edX101/How_to_Create_an_edX_Course","created_at" : { "$date" :
1358028106904 }, "last_activity_at" : { "$date" : 1358134464424 },"tags_array"
: [], "thread_type": "discussion", "title" : "Welcome to the edX101 forum!",
"updated_at" : { "$date" :1358134453862 }, "votes" : { "count" : 1, "down" :
[], "down_count" : 0, "point" : 1, "up" :[ "48" ], "up_count" : 1 } }

If you use a JSON formatter to “pretty print” this document, a version that is more readable is produced.

{
 "_id": {
   "$oid": "50f1dd4ae05f6d2600000001"
 },
 "_type": "CommentThread",
 "anonymous": false,
 "anonymous_to_peers": false,
 "at_position_list": [

 ],
 "author_id": "NNNNNNN",
 "author_username": "AAAAAAAAAA",
 "body": "Welcome to the edX101 forum!\n\nThis forum will be regularly
 monitored by edX. Please post your questions and comments here. When
 asking a question, don't forget to search the forum to check whether
 your question has already been answered.\n\n",
 "closed": false,
 "comment_count": 0,
 "commentable_id": "i4x-edX-edX101-course-How_to_Create_an_edX_Course",
 "course_id": "edX\/edX101\/How_to_Create_an_edX_Course",
 "created_at": {
   "$date": 1358028106904
 },
 "last_activity_at": {
   "$date": 1358134464424
 },
 "tags_array": [

 ],
 "thread_type": "discussion",
 "title": "Welcome to the edX101 forum!",
 "updated_at": {
   "$date": 1358134453862
 },
 "votes": {
   "count": 1,
   "down": [

   ],
   "down_count": 0,
   "point": 1,
   "up": [
     "48"
   ],
   "up_count": 1
 }
}

6.4.2.2. Comment Document Example#

{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "52e54fdd801eb74c33000070" }, "votes" : { "up" : [],
"down" : [], "up_count" : 0, "down_count" : 0, "count" : 0, "point" : 0 },
"visible" : true, "abuse_flaggers" : [], "historical_abuse_flaggers" : [],
"parent_ids" : [], "at_position_list" : [], "body" : "I'm hoping this
Demonstration course will help me figure out how to take the course I enrolled
in. I am just auditing the course, but I want to benefit from it as much as
possible, as I am extremely interested in it.\n", "course_id" :
"edX/DemoX/Demo_Course", "_type" : "Comment", "endorsed" : true, "endorsement"
: { "user_id" : "9", "time" : ISODate("2014-08-29T15:11:49.442Z") },
"anonymous" : false, "anonymous_to_peers" : false, "author_id" : "NNNNNNN",
"comment_thread_id" : { "$oid" : "52e4e880c0df1fa59600004d" },
"author_username" : "AAAAAAAAAA", "sk" : "52e54fdd801eb74c33000070",
updated_at" : { "$date" : 1390759901966 }, "created_at" : { "$date" :
1390759901966 } }

When pretty printed, this comment has the following format.

{
 "_id": {
   "$oid": "52e54fdd801eb74c33000070"
 },
 "votes": {
   "up": [

   ],
   "down": [

   ],
   "up_count": 0,
   "down_count": 0,
   "count": 0,
   "point": 0
 },
 "visible": true,
 "abuse_flaggers": [

 ],
 "historical_abuse_flaggers": [

 ],
 "parent_ids": [

 ],
 "at_position_list": [

 ],
 "body": "I'm hoping this Demonstration course will help me figure out how
 to take the course I enrolled in. I am just auditing the course, but I
 want to benefit from it as much as possible, as I am extremely interested
 in it.\n",
 "course_id": "edX\/DemoX\/Demo_Course",
 "_type": "Comment",
 "endorsed": true,
 "endorsement": {
   "user_id": "9",
   "time": {
     "$date": 1390759911966
   }
 }
 "anonymous": false,
 "anonymous_to_peers": false,
 "author_id": "NNNNNNN",
 "comment_thread_id": {
   "$oid": "52e4e880c0df1fa59600004d"
 },
 "author_username": "AAAAAAAAAA",
 "sk": "52e54fdd801eb74c33000070",
 "updated_at": {
   "$date": 1390759901966
 },
 "created_at": {
   "$date": 1390759901966
 }
}

6.4.3. Shared Fields#

Descriptions of the fields that are present for both CommentThread and Comment objects follow.

6.4.3.1. _id#

The 12-byte MongoDB unique ID for this collection. Like all MongoDB IDs, the IDs are monotonically increasing and the first four bytes are a timestamp.

6.4.3.2. _type#

CommentThread or Comment depending on the type of object.

6.4.3.3. anonymous#

If true, this CommentThread or Comment displays in the user interface as written by “anonymous”, even to course team members and discussion team members.

6.4.3.4. anonymous_to_peers#

If true, this CommentThread or Comment displays in the user interface as written by “anonymous” to students, but members of the course team and the discussion team can see the author’s username.

6.4.3.5. at_position_list#

No longer used. Child comments (replies) are sorted by their created_at timestamp only.

6.4.3.6. author_id#

Identifies the user who wrote this. Corresponds to the user IDs stored in the MySQL database as auth_user.id.

6.4.3.7. author_username#

The username of the person who wrote the discussion post or comment.

6.4.3.8. body#

Text of the comment in Markdown. UTF-8 encoded.

6.4.3.9. course_id#

The full course_id of the course that this comment was made in, including org and run. This value can be seen in the URL when browsing the courseware section. Example: BerkeleyX/Stat2.1x/2013_Spring.

6.4.3.10. created_at#

Timestamp in UTC. Example: ISODate("2013-02-21T03:03:04.587Z").

6.4.3.11. updated_at#

Timestamp in UTC. Example: ISODate("2013-02-21T03:03:04.587Z").

6.4.3.12. votes#

Both CommentThread and Comment objects support voting. In the user interface, students can vote for posts (CommentThread objects) and for responses, but not for the third-level comments made on responses. All Comment objects still have this attribute, even though there is no way to actually vote on the comment-level items in the UI. This attribute is an object that has the following items inside.

  • up = list of User IDs that up-voted this comment or thread.

  • down = (no longer used) list of User IDs that down-voted this comment or thread.

  • up_count = total upvotes received.

  • down_count = No longer used. Total downvotes received.

  • count = total votes cast.

  • point = net vote, now always equal to up_count.

A user only has one vote per Comment or CommentThread. Although a downvote can still be written to the database, the UI no longer displays a downvote option.

6.4.4. CommentThread Fields#

The following fields are specific to CommentThread objects. Each thread in the discussion forums is represented by one CommentThread.

6.4.4.1. closed#

If true, this thread was closed by a discussion forum moderator or admin.

6.4.4.2. comment_count#

The number of comment replies in this thread. This includes all responses and replies, but does not include the original post that started the thread. In this example, the comment_count for the initial CommentThread is 4.

CommentThread: “What’s a good breakfast?”
  • Comment: “Just eat cereal!”

  • Comment: “Try a Loco Moco, it’s amazing!” * Comment: “A Loco Moco? Only if you want a heart attack!” * Comment: “But it’s worth it! Just get a spam musubi on the side.”

6.4.4.3. commentable_id#

A course team can attach a discussion to any piece of content in the course, or to top level categories like “General” and “Troubleshooting”. When the discussion is a top level category it is specified in the course’s policy file, and the commentable_id uses the format i4x-{org}-{course}-{run}-{name}. When the discussion is a specific component in the course, the commentable_id identifies that component; for example, “d9f970a42067413cbb633f81cfb12604”.

6.4.4.4. last_activity_at#

Timestamp in UTC indicating the last time there was activity in the thread (new posts, edits, etc). Closing the thread does not affect the value in this field.

6.4.4.5. tags_array#

No longer used.

History: Intended to be a list of user definable tags.

6.4.4.6. title#

Title of the thread. UTF-8 string.

6.4.4.7. thread_type#

Identifies the type of post as a “question” or “discussion”.

History: Added 4 Sep 2014.

6.4.5. Comment Fields#

The following fields are specific to Comment objects. A Comment is either a response to a CommentThread (such as an answer to the question), or a reply to another Comment (a comment about somebody’s answer).

History: In earlier versions of the edX platform, Comment replies could nest much more deeply. However, edX later restricted participation to three levels (post, response, comment), similar to the practice on StackOverflow.

6.4.5.1. visible#

Not used.

6.4.5.2. abuse_flaggers#

Records the user ID of each user who selects the Report Misuse flag for a Comment in the user interface. Stores an array of user IDs if more than one user flags the Comment. This is empty if no users flag the Comment.

6.4.5.3. historical_abuse_flaggers#

If a discussion moderator removes the Report Misuse flag from a Comment, all user IDs are removed from the abuse_flaggers field and then written to this field.

6.4.5.4. endorsed#

Boolean value. True if a forum moderator has marked this response to a CommentThread with a thread_type of “discussion” as a valuable contribution, or if a forum moderator or the originator of a CommentThread with a thread_type of “question” has marked this response as the correct answer.

The endorsed field is present for comments that are made as replies to responses, but in these cases the value is always false: the user interface does not offer a way to endorse comments.

6.4.5.5. endorsement#

Contains time and user_id fields for the date and time that this response to a post was endorsed and the numeric user ID (from auth_user.id) of the person who endorsed it.

History: Added 4 Sep 2014.

6.4.5.6. comment_thread_id#

Identifies the CommentThread that the Comment is a part of.

6.4.5.7. parent_id#

Applies only to comments made to a response. In the example given for comment_count above, “A Loco Moco? Only if you want a heart attack!” is a comment that was made to the response, “Try a Loco Moco, it’s amazing!”

The parent_id is the _id of the response-level Comment that this Comment is a reply to. Note that this field is only present in a Comment that is a reply to another Comment; it does not appear in a Comment that is a reply to a CommentThread.

6.4.5.8. parent_ids#

The parent_ids field appears in all Comment objects, and contains the _id of all ancestor comments. Since the UI now prevents comments from being nested more than one layer deep, it will only ever have at most one element in it. If a Comment has no parent, it is an empty list.

6.4.5.9. sk#

A randomly generated number that drives a sorted index to improve online performance.