Thank you for your guidance Nir.
At this stage building JavaFX is beyond me. So I’ll just monitor the progress of early releases and test once a build contains the fix of interest. From: Nir Lisker <nlis...@gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, 17 September 2025 3:40 PM To: Bryon Dunkley-Smith <bdunkley-sm...@bigpond.com> Cc: openjfx-dev@openjdk.org Subject: Re: Availability of JavaFX build incorporating JDK-8366217 fix Hi Bryon, The fastest ways are building JavaFX and testing it immediately, or waiting a bit until the early-access build contains that fix (https://jdk.java.net/javafx26/). - Nir On Wed, Sep 17, 2025 at 6:10 AM Bryon Dunkley-Smith <bdunkley-sm...@bigpond.com <mailto:bdunkley-sm...@bigpond.com> > wrote: Hi All, Apologies in advance if the terminology in my question is incorrect as I’m somewhat out of my depth here. I have been monitoring https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8305842 (Video sometimes does not start when reinitializing in Windows 11) for progress with interest because I have a legacy JavaFX based application which has functioned flawlessly for several years, but since upgrading from Win10 to Win1, there has been intermittent/random failures of videos playing with a ERROR_MEDIA_INVALID being thrown, even though I’ve used the same “media” with success previously and it often runs without error. So when I saw https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8366217 (Update GStreamer to 1.26.5), I wondered if the update to GStreamer may resolve my issue of intermittent/random failures of videos. I see that “This pull request has now been integrated.” and being ignorant of how this finds its way into a release of JavaFX, could someone advise me of how I would know if a version (early release?) is available incorporating this “fix” and where I can download it from. Thanks, Bryon