https://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55143
--- Comment #23 from Olivier F. R. Dierick o.dierick@piezo-forte.be --- (In reply to zeroredgrave from comment #22)
(also, you may also need to check syswow64 dir too, not just system32 - they're actually reversed to what the number at the end suggests (unless you've explicitly created a pure 32bit prefix, but that seems unlikely))
i never created any wine prefix until now and i'm using a default wine prefix. i checked on dir and found syswow64 dir inside windows dir
Hello,
What he says is to check if winegstreamer.dll is present or not in windows/syswow64 dir, not just that the dir exists.
It is 'winegstreamer.dll' not 'wingstreamer.dll'. Notice the 'e' in 'wine'. It may be a typo in your comment but it's better to double check that you didn't make the same typo when searching in the directories.
(In reply to zeroredgrave from comment #22)
i download in mint repository and try upgrade from latest wine stable version on website
Linux Mint doesn't provide its own Wine packages. It has a wine-installer package that install an ancient version of Wine stable [1].
I can only guess that it downloads the winehq-stable packages from winehq.org. It's highly doubtful that those packages were build without gstreamer support.
You may have missed dependencies when upgrading. What are the exact commands you used in the terminal to upgrade wine to the latest stable version?.
Regards.
[1] https://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?t=394972