<table><tr><td style="">dfaure added a comment.
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padding: 0 4px;">@ngraham</a> AFAIK gnome has a trick where a fuse mount is created, its path is passed to the application being started, and the application, if it supports gvfs, re-translates that into a URL and uses that instead if it makes more sense. This way "dumb" apps get a local file (with all the limitations of doing synchronous I/O over the network) and network-transparent applications use URLs.<br />
On the other hand, the KDE logic is "if the app takes %f and not %u in the Exec line, it doesn't support remote URLs, so we need to download the file first" (that's done by kioexec). If you see a "download first" check if kioexec is running. But if it's the app doing it, then I have no idea.</p></div></div><br /><div><strong>REPOSITORY</strong><div><div>R241 KIO</div></div></div><br /><div><strong>REVISION DETAIL</strong><div><a href="https://phabricator.kde.org/D23384">https://phabricator.kde.org/D23384</a></div></div><br /><div><strong>To: </strong>feverfew, fvogt, davidedmundson, dfaure, ngraham<br /><strong>Cc: </strong>sitter, davidedmundson, kde-frameworks-devel, ngraham, LeGast00n, GB_2, michaelh, bruns<br /></div>