Aspects Learner Analytics combines several free, open source, tools to add analytics and reporting capabilities to the Open edX platform. This plugin offers easy installation, configuration, and deployment of these tools using Tutor. The tools Aspects uses are:
- ClickHouse, a fast, scalable analytics database that can be run anywhere
- Apache Superset, a data visualization platform and data API
- OpenFUN Ralph, a Learning Record store (and more) that can validate and store xAPI statements in ClickHouse
- Vector, a log forwarding tool that can be used to forward tracking log and xAPI data to ClickHouse
- event-routing-backends, an Open edX plugin that transforms tracking logs into xAPI and optionally forwards them to one or more Learning Record Stores in near real time
- event-sink-clickhouse, an Open edX plugin that exports course structure and high level data to ClickHouse at publish time
- dbt, a tool to build data pipelines from SQL queries. The dbt project used by this plugin is aspects-dbt.
See https://github.com/openedx/openedx-aspects for more details about the Aspects architecture and high level documentation.
Aspects is a community developed effort combining the Cairn project by Overhang.io and the OARS project by EduNEXT, OpenCraft, and Axim Collaborative.
Note: Aspects is beta and not yet production ready! Please feel free to experiment with the system and offer feedback about what you'd like to see by adding Issues in this repository. Current details on the beta progress can be found here: https://openedx.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/COMM/pages/3861512203/Aspects+Beta
This plugin is compatible with Tutor 15.0.0 and later and is expected to be compatible with Open edX releases from Nutmeg forward.
Aspects is implemented as a Tutor plugin. Documentation will be coming soon to cover how to install Aspects in non-Tutor environments, but by far the easiest way to try and install it is via Tutor. These instructions assume you are running a tutor local install, which is the fastest and easiest way to get started.
Install Tutor: https://docs.tutor.overhang.io/install.html#install
Create an admin user on the LMS: https://docs.tutor.overhang.io/whatnext.html#logging-in-as-administrator
Install the Aspects plugin (in your Tutor Python environment):
pip install tutor-contrib-aspects
Enable the plugins:
tutor plugins enable aspects
Save the changes to the environment:
tutor config save
Because we're installing new applications in LMS (event-routing-backends, event-sink-clickhouse) you will need to rebuild your openedx image:
tutor images build openedx --no-cache
Run the initialization scripts:
tutor local do init
At this point you should have a working Tutor / Aspects environment, but with no way to create data! There are a few options for how to proceed.
If you would just like to see some data populated in the charts without loading a real course in the LMS you can create test data in the database (use
--help
for usage):tutor local do load-xapi-test-data
OR Load the test course and generate real data from the LMS:
- https://docs.tutor.overhang.io/whatnext.html#importing-a-demo-course
- Log into the LMS with your admin user and enroll / proceed through the demo course
OR If you are adding Aspects to an existing LMS that already has data
Sink course data from the LMS to clickhouse (see https://github.com/openedx/openedx-event-sink-clickhouse for more information):
tutor local do dump-courses-to-clickhouse --options "--force"
Sink Historical event data to ClickHouse:
tutor [dev|local] do transform_tracking_logs \ --source_provider LOCAL --source_config '{"key": "/openedx/data", "container": "logs", "prefix": "tracking.log"}' \ --transformer_type xapi # Note that this will work only for default tutor installation. If you store your tracking logs any other way, you need to change the source_config option accordingly. # See https://event-routing-backends.readthedocs.io/en/latest/howto/how_to_bulk_transform.html#sources-and-destinations for details on how to change the source_config option.
You should now have data to look at in Superset! Log in to https://superset.local.overhang.io/ with your admin account and you should see charts with your data.
Aspects maintains the Superset assets in this repository, specifically the dashboards, charts, datasets, and databases. That means that any updates made here will be reflected on your Superset instance when you update your deployment.
But it also means that any local changes you make to these assets will be overwritten when you update your deployment. To prevent your local changes from being overwritten, please create new assets and make your changes there instead. You can copy an existing asset by editing the asset in Superset and selecting "Save As" to save it to a new name.
To share your charts with others in the community, use Superset's "Export" button to save a zip file of your charts and related datasets.
Warning
The exported datasets will contain hard-coded references to your particular databases, including your database hostname, port, and username, in some cases it may also contain database passwords. It is vital that you review the database and dataset files before sharing them.
To import charts or dashboards shared by someone in the community:
- Expand the zip file and look for any files added under
databases
. Update thesqlalchemy_uri
to match your database's connection details. - Compress the files back into a
.zip
file. - On the Charts or Dashboards page, use the "Import" button to upload your
.zip
file.
The Superset assets provided by Aspects can be found in the templated tutoraspects/templates/openedx-assets/assets directory. For the most part, these files are what Superset exports, but with some crucial differences which make these assets usable across all Tutor deployments.
To contribute assets to Aspects:
Fork this repository and have a locally running Tutor set up with this plugin installed.
Export the assets you want to contribute as described in Sharing Charts and Dashboards
Run the command: tutor aspects import_superset_zip ~/Downloads/your_file.zip
This command will copy the files from your zip to the assets directory and attempt to warn you if there are hard coded connection settings where it expects template variables. These are usually in database and dataset assets, and those are often assets that already exist. The warnings look like:
WARN: fact_enrollments.yaml has schema set to reporting instead of a setting.
Check the diff of files and update any database connection strings or table names to use Tutor configuration template variables instead of hard-coded strings, e.g. replace
clickhouse
with{{CLICKHOUSE_HOST}}
. Passwords can be left as{{CLICKHOUSE_PASSWORD}}
, though be aware that if you are adding new databases, you'll need to updateSUPERSET_DB_PASSWORDS
in the init scripts. Here is the default connection string for reference:``clickhousedb+connect://{{CLICKHOUSE_REPORT_URL}}``
You will likely also run into issues where our SQL templates have been expanded into their actual SQL. If you haven't changed the SQL of these queries (stored in tutoraspects/templates/openedx-assets/queries you can just revert that change back to their include values such as: sql: "{% include 'openedx-assets/queries/fact_enrollments_by_day.sql' %}"
The script will also warn about missing _roles in dashboards. Superset does not export these, so you will need to manually add this key with the roles that are necessary to view the dashboard. See the existing dashboards for how this is done.
Run the command tutor aspects check_superset_assets to confirm there are no duplicate assets, which can happen when you rename an asset, and will cause import to fail. The command will automatically delete the older file if it finds a duplicate.
Check that everything imports correctly by running tutor local do init -l aspects and confirming there are no errors.
Double check that your database password did not get exported before committing!
Commit and submit a PR with screenshots of your new chart or dashboards, along with an explanation of what data question they answer.
Superset supports creating virtual datasets, which are datasets defined using a SQL query instead of mapping directly to an underlying database object. Aspects leverages virtual datasets, along with SQL templating, to make better use of table indexes.
To make it easier for developers to manage virtual datasets, there is an extra step that can be done on the output of tutor aspects serialize
. The sql
section of the dataset yaml can be moved to its own file in the queries directory and included in the yaml like so:
sql: "{% include 'openedx-assets/queries/query.sql' %}"
However, please keep in mind that the assets declaration is itself a jinja template. That means that any jinja used in the dataset definition should be escaped. There are examples of how to handle this in the existing queries, such as dim_courses.sql.
This software is licensed under the terms of the AGPLv3.