Noto Sans CJK and Noto Serif CJK comprehensively cover Simplified Chinese,
Traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean in a unified font family. This
includes the full coverage of CJK Ideographs with variation support for 4
regions, Kangxi radicals, Japanese Kana, Korean Hangul, and other CJK symbols
and letters in the Basic Multilingual Plane of Unicode. It also provides limited
coverage of CJK Ideographs in Plane 2 of Unicode as necessary to support
standards from China and Japan.
This port is the Sans set of Japanese fonts which supports all of the kanji in
JIS X 0208, JIS X 0213, and JIS X 0212 to include all kanji in Adobe-Japan1-6.
This is the FreeBSD Ports Collection. For an easy to use
WEB-based interface to it, please see:
https://www.FreeBSD.org/ports
For general information on the Ports Collection, please see the
FreeBSD Handbook ports section which is available from:
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/ports/
for the latest official version
or:
The ports(7) manual page (man ports).
These will explain how to use ports and packages.
If you would like to search for a port, you can do so easily by
saying (in /usr/ports):
make search name="<name>"
or:
make search key="<keyword>"
which will generate a list of all ports matching <name> or <keyword>.
make search also supports wildcards, such as:
make search name="gtk*"
For information about contributing to FreeBSD ports, please see the Porter's
Handbook, available at:
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/porters-handbook/
NOTE: This tree will GROW significantly in size during normal usage!
The distribution tar files can and do accumulate in /usr/ports/distfiles,
and the individual ports will also use up lots of space in their work
subdirectories unless you remember to "make clean" after you're done
building a given port. /usr/ports/distfiles can also be periodically
cleaned without ill-effect.