beezyai
🏗 Welcome to your new SDK! 🏗
It has been generated successfully based on your OpenAPI spec. However, it is not yet ready for production use. Here are some next steps:
SDK Installation
NPM
npm add @speakeasy-sdks/beezyai
PNPM
pnpm add @speakeasy-sdks/beezyai
Bun
bun add @speakeasy-sdks/beezyai
Yarn
yarn add @speakeasy-sdks/beezyai zod
Requirements
For supported JavaScript runtimes, please consult RUNTIMES.md.
SDK Example Usage
Example
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
const beezy = new Beezy({
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
Available Resources and Operations
- stream - Stream a chat completion
- upload - Upload a file for fine-tuning
Server-sent event streaming
Server-sent events are used to stream content from certain
operations. These operations will expose the stream as an async iterable that
can be consumed using a for await...of
loop. The loop will
terminate when the server no longer has any events to send and closes the
underlying connection.
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
const beezy = new Beezy({
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
File uploads
Certain SDK methods accept files as part of a multi-part request. It is possible and typically recommended to upload files as a stream rather than reading the entire contents into memory. This avoids excessive memory consumption and potentially crashing with out-of-memory errors when working with very large files. The following example demonstrates how to attach a file stream to a request.
[!TIP]
Depending on your JavaScript runtime, there are convenient utilities that return a handle to a file without reading the entire contents into memory:
- Node.js v20+: Since v20, Node.js comes with a native
openAsBlob
function in node:fs
.
- Bun: The native
Bun.file
function produces a file handle that can be used for streaming file uploads.
- Browsers: All supported browsers return an instance to a
File
when reading the value from an <input type="file">
element.
- Node.js v18: A file stream can be created using the
fileFrom
helper from fetch-blob/from.js
.
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
import { openAsBlob } from "node:fs";
const beezy = new Beezy({
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.finetune.upload({
file: await openAsBlob("./sample-file"),
model: "ex-7b",
});
console.log(result);
}
run();
Error Handling
All SDK methods return a response object or throw an error. If Error objects are specified in your OpenAPI Spec, the SDK will throw the appropriate Error type.
errors.TooManyRequestsResponse | 429 | application/json |
errors.SDKError | 4xx-5xx | / |
Validation errors can also occur when either method arguments or data returned from the server do not match the expected format. The SDKValidationError
that is thrown as a result will capture the raw value that failed validation in an attribute called rawValue
. Additionally, a pretty()
method is available on this error that can be used to log a nicely formatted string since validation errors can list many issues and the plain error string may be difficult read when debugging.
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
import { SDKValidationError } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai/models/errors/sdkvalidationerror.js";
const beezy = new Beezy({
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
let result;
try {
result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
} catch (err) {
switch (true) {
case err instanceof SDKValidationError: {
console.error(err.pretty());
console.error(err.rawValue);
return;
}
case err instanceof TooManyRequestsResponse: {
console.error(err);
return;
}
default: {
throw err;
}
}
}
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
Server Selection
Select Server by Index
You can override the default server globally by passing a server index to the serverIdx
optional parameter when initializing the SDK client instance. The selected server will then be used as the default on the operations that use it. This table lists the indexes associated with the available servers:
0 | https://{env}.api.speakeasyapi.dev | env (default is prd ) |
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
const beezy = new Beezy({
serverIdx: 0,
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
Variables
Some of the server options above contain variables. If you want to set the values of those variables, the following optional parameters are available when initializing the SDK client instance:
Override Server URL Per-Client
The default server can also be overridden globally by passing a URL to the serverURL
optional parameter when initializing the SDK client instance. For example:
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
const beezy = new Beezy({
serverURL: "https://{env}.api.speakeasyapi.dev",
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
Custom HTTP Client
The TypeScript SDK makes API calls using an HTTPClient
that wraps the native
Fetch API. This
client is a thin wrapper around fetch
and provides the ability to attach hooks
around the request lifecycle that can be used to modify the request or handle
errors and response.
The HTTPClient
constructor takes an optional fetcher
argument that can be
used to integrate a third-party HTTP client or when writing tests to mock out
the HTTP client and feed in fixtures.
The following example shows how to use the "beforeRequest"
hook to to add a
custom header and a timeout to requests and how to use the "requestError"
hook
to log errors:
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
import { HTTPClient } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai/lib/http";
const httpClient = new HTTPClient({
fetcher: (request) => {
return fetch(request);
}
});
httpClient.addHook("beforeRequest", (request) => {
const nextRequest = new Request(request, {
signal: request.signal || AbortSignal.timeout(5000)
});
nextRequest.headers.set("x-custom-header", "custom value");
return nextRequest;
});
httpClient.addHook("requestError", (error, request) => {
console.group("Request Error");
console.log("Reason:", `${error}`);
console.log("Endpoint:", `${request.method} ${request.url}`);
console.groupEnd();
});
const sdk = new Beezy({ httpClient });
Authentication
Per-Client Security Schemes
This SDK supports the following security scheme globally:
To authenticate with the API the token
parameter must be set when initializing the SDK client instance. For example:
import { Beezy } from "@speakeasy-sdks/beezyai";
const beezy = new Beezy({
token: "<YOUR_BEARER_TOKEN_HERE>",
});
async function run() {
const result = await beezy.chat.stream({
prompt: "<value>",
model: "ex-30b",
});
for await (const event of result) {
}
}
run();
Development
Maturity
This SDK is in beta, and there may be breaking changes between versions without a major version update. Therefore, we recommend pinning usage
to a specific package version. This way, you can install the same version each time without breaking changes unless you are intentionally
looking for the latest version.
Contributions
While we value open-source contributions to this SDK, this library is generated programmatically.
Feel free to open a PR or a Github issue as a proof of concept and we'll do our best to include it in a future release!