Providers

Bailing

AISDK provides first-class support for Bailing with fully typed model APIs. Model capabilities are enforced at compile time using Rust's type system. This prevents model capability mismatches and guarantees the selected model is valid for the task (e.g. tool calling).

Installation

Enable the Bailing provider feature:

cargo add aisdk --features bailing

This installs AISDK with the Bailing provider enabled. Once you have enabled the Bailing provider, you can use all aisdk features with it.

Create a Provider Instance

To create a provider instance, call Bailing::model_name(), where model_name is the Bailing model you want to use. Model names are exposed as snake-case methods.

use aisdk::providers::Bailing;

let bailing = Bailing::ling_1t();

This initializes the provider with:

Basic Text Generation

Example using LanguageModelRequest for text generation.

use aisdk::{
    core::LanguageModelRequest,
    providers::Bailing,
};

#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {

    let bailing = Bailing::ling_1t();

    let response = LanguageModelRequest::builder()
        .model(bailing)
        .prompt("Write a short poem about Rust.")
        .build()
        .generate_text()
        .await?;

    println!("Response text: {:?}", response.text());
    Ok(())
}

Provider Settings

You can customize provider configuration using Bailing::builder()

API Key

let bailing = Bailing::<Ling1t>::builder()
    .api_key("your-api-key")
    .build()?;

If not specified, AISDK uses the BAILING_API_TOKEN environment variable.

Base URL

Useful when routing through a proxy, gateway, or self-hosted compatible endpoint.

let bailing = Bailing::<Ling1t>::builder()
    .base_url("https://api.tbox.cn/api/llm/v1/chat/completions")
    .build()?;

Path (Full URL Override)

Use .path(...) to override the full request URL instead of only the base URL.

let bailing = Bailing::<Ling1t>::builder()
    .path("https://full-url.example/v1/chat/completions")
    .build()?;

Provider Name

For logging, analytics, and observability.

let bailing = Bailing::<Ling1t>::builder()
    .provider_name("Bailing")
    .build()?;

Full Custom Configuration Example

let bailing = Bailing::<Ling1t>::builder()
    .api_key("your-api-key")
    .base_url("https://api.tbox.cn/api/llm/v1/chat/completions")
    .path("https://full-url.example/v1/chat/completions")
    .provider_name("Bailing")
    .build()?;

Dynamic Model Selection

For runtime model selection (e.g., loading models from config files), use DynamicModel:

Using model_name() Method with Default Settings

use aisdk::providers::Bailing;

// Specify model as a string at runtime
let bailing = Bailing::model_name("Ling-1T");

Using Builder Pattern with Custom Settings

use aisdk::{
    core::DynamicModel,
    providers::Bailing,
};

let bailing = Bailing::<DynamicModel>::builder()
	.model_name("Ling-1T")
	.api_key("your-api-key")
	.base_url("https://api.tbox.cn/api/llm/v1/chat/completions")
	.path("https://full-url.example/v1/chat/completions")
	.provider_name("Bailing")
	.build()?;

Warning: When using DynamicModel, model capabilities are not validated at compile time. This means there's no guarantee the model supports requested features (e.g., tool calls, structured output). For compile-time safety, use the typed methods like Bailing::ling_1t().

Next Steps