As mentioned in this message [1], the last release of OpenJFX 8 was 8u202 in January 2019, in conjunction with the last Oracle-led OpenJDK release of the same. You can see the 8u202-ga tag [2] in the openjfx 8u repo.

-- Kevin

[1] https://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/openjfx-dev/2019-January/023039.html
[2] http://hg.openjdk.java.net/openjfx/8u/rt/tags

On 6/17/2019 4:03 AM, Martijn Verburg wrote:
Out of curiosity - what was the last release of OpenJFX 8? If I'm reading
the repos correctly it should be 8u60?

Cheers,
Martijn


On Tue, 11 Jun 2019 at 14:01, Tom Schindl <tom.schi...@bestsolution.at>
wrote:

Hi Kevin,

Well isn't that true as well for jfx-12 - or is this maintained? What
makes jfx-12 different from jfx-8? Or is the plan to remove jfx-12 once
jfx-13 is released, ...?

Anyways, I accept this and I'll see how I can get that forked to my own
github account (once I have a need for it :-)

Tom

On 11.06.19 13:55, Kevin Rushforth wrote:
If someone wants to create a new project and fork the openjfx/8u-dev/rt
repo there, that would be fine...as long as everyone understand that it
is a fork of an unmaintained code base.

Since openjfx/8u is not being maintained, neither the
javafxports/openjdk-jfx repo nor the new (for project Skara) openjdk
project on GitHub would be suitable.

-- Kevin


On 6/11/2019 3:25 AM, Tom Schindl wrote:
Hi,

What I asked some time ago is that the github fork also contains the
latest u8-state before it got frozen - similar to eg jfx-11, jfx-12 (and
most likely soon jfx-13 branch).

This would at least give us all a central place we can create our forks
on (I understand nobody is willing to maintain merge back changes
there).
Tom

On 10.06.19 22:29, Kevin Rushforth wrote:
I recommend that you upgrade to JDK 12 + openjfx 12 if you want to keep
current, since openjfx-8u is not supported.

If you must stay on JDK 8, Oracle is supporting JavaFX in JDK 8 through
March of 2022 [1], so you could check into that (note that this list is
not the place to discuss support, however). Otherwise, you are on
your own.

-- Kevin

[1]
https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/java-se-support-roadmap.html

On 6/9/2019 7:52 PM, guoge (A) wrote:
Thanks for your reply, Kevin

I wonder to know if I'm still using JDK8 with JFX8 because JFX 11 can
not match with JDK8 (as I know),
How can I deal with the vulnerabilities of JFX8?

Thanks,
Guo Ge
--
Tom Schindl, CTO
BestSolution.at EDV Systemhaus GmbH
Eduard-Bodem-Gasse 5-7. A-6020 Innsbruck
Reg. Nr. FN 222302s am Firmenbuchgericht Innsbruck


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