The smallest-ever force field map of nature.
Physicists have mapped the forces acting inside a #proton, showing in unprecedented detail how #quarks—the tiny #particles within—respond when hit by high-energy #photons.
The new result breaks down #space and #time into a fine grid, allowing simulating how the strong force—the fundamental interaction that binds quarks into #protons and #neutrons—varies across different regions inside the proton.
#physics
https://phys.org/news/2025-02-scientists-proton.html
With a simple `podman login` and `podman push` you can push containers from your local machine to your #forgejo instance, so you can use said containers on other machines as Forgejo also is an OCI-compliant container registry :) And now you can use these containers to build even more software with forgejo Actions and don't worry about Docker limiting traffic from their registry ;)
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Finally sorted out how to have changing Git tip and keeping it “pure” in NixOS build. Here’s flake.nix:
{
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-24.11";
outputs = { self, nixpkgs }: let
tpmddSrc = if builtins.pathExists ./linux-tpmdd.json then
builtins.removeAttrs (builtins.fromJSON (builtins.readFile ./linux-tpmdd.json)) [ "hash" "path" "date" ]
else {};
in {
nixosConfigurations = {
tpmdd = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
system = "x86_64-linux";
modules = [
({ config, lib, pkgs, modulesPath, ... }:
import ./configuration.nix {
inherit config lib pkgs modulesPath tpmddSrc;
}
)
];
};
};
};
}
After this I can refer to the Git tip with tpmddSrc in configuration.nix, or any other module.
The JSON itself is generated in Dockerfile, pod or Dockerfile as:
nix-prefetch-git --url https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jarkko/linux-tpmdd.git > linux-tpmdd.json
Two days went figuring this out. I switched from Podman to Packer but in the end of the day I could have just well used Podman now that I figured out how to pass the data (I had some terrible moments with builtins.readFile and builtins.getEnv with no luck).
Oh well, I use Packer for now and add a Dockerfile in some point in future.
As said, this effort was done for the sake engineering some kind edit-compile-run cycle for Rust enabled Linux kernel (even tho my configuration.nix at this point has none of that but it is now downhill ;-) knock knock