# `src batch new`


## Flags

| Name | Description | Default Value |
|------|-------------|---------------|
| `-dump-requests` | Log GraphQL requests and responses to stdout | `false` |
| `-f` | The name of the batch spec file to create. | `batch.yaml` |
| `-get-curl` | Print the curl command for executing this query and exit (WARNING: includes printing your access token!) | `false` |
| `-insecure-skip-verify` | Skip validation of TLS certificates against trusted chains | `false` |
| `-skip-errors` | If true, errors encountered won't stop the program, but only log them. | `false` |
| `-trace` | Log the trace ID for requests. See https://docs.sourcegraph.com/admin/observability/tracing | `false` |
| `-user-agent-telemetry` | Include the operating system and architecture in the User-Agent sent with requests to Sourcegraph | `true` |


## Usage

```
Usage of 'src batch new':
  -dump-requests
    	Log GraphQL requests and responses to stdout
  -f string
    	The name of the batch spec file to create. (default "batch.yaml")
  -get-curl
    	Print the curl command for executing this query and exit (WARNING: includes printing your access token!)
  -insecure-skip-verify
    	Skip validation of TLS certificates against trusted chains
  -skip-errors
    	If true, errors encountered won't stop the program, but only log them.
  -trace
    	Log the trace ID for requests. See https://docs.sourcegraph.com/admin/observability/tracing
  -user-agent-telemetry
    	Include the operating system and architecture in the User-Agent sent with requests to Sourcegraph (default true)

'src batch new' creates a new batch spec YAML, prefilled with all required
fields.

Usage:

    src batch new [-f FILE]

Examples:


    $ src batch new -f batch.spec.yaml



```
	