# Marlin on Windows This short guide covers a few tasks when running Marlin on Windows: 1. **Running `marlin init`.** 2. **Moving and renaming files.** 3. **Verifying that tags and attributes stay linked.** 4. **Checking watcher performance under heavy activity.** --- ## 1 Run `marlin init` 1. Open *PowerShell* or *Command Prompt*. 2. Navigate to the directory you want indexed, e.g. ```powershell cd C:\Users\You\Documents\Project ``` 3. Run `marlin init` from that folder. The command creates the database and performs the first scan. --- ## 2 Move and rename files Windows Explorer renames and moves are tracked automatically when the watcher is running. 1. Start the watcher in a terminal: ```powershell marlin watch start C:\Users\You\Documents\Project ``` 2. Move or rename files/directories through Explorer or the `move` command. 3. The watcher logs the operations and updates the database. --- ## 3 Verify tags and attributes After moving or renaming files, confirm that metadata stayed linked: ```powershell marlin search "tag:mytag" # paths should reflect new locations marlin attr get path/to/file.txt # attributes move with the file ``` If anything is missing, run a manual dirty scan: ```powershell marlin scan --dirty C:\Users\You\Documents\Project ``` --- ## 4 Check watcher performance To stress-test the watcher under many events: 1. Open another terminal window and create a burst of file operations: ```powershell 1..1000 | % { New-Item -Path test$_ -ItemType File } 1..1000 | % { Remove-Item test$_ } ``` 2. Watch the original terminal for log messages and ensure the watcher keeps up without large delays. 3. For a longer test, let the watcher run overnight while copying or deleting large trees. --- *End of guide*