With ``SparseArray`KrylovLinearSolve[A,b, "Preconditioner" -> f]`` you can use an arbitrary function `f` as preconditioner. Here an example:

    precdata = SparseArray`SparseMatrixILU[A, "Method" -> "ILU0"]
    f = x \[Function] SparseArray`SparseMatrixApplyILU[precdata, x]

Other accepted values for the option `"Method"` are "ILUT" and "ILUTP".

More or less,

    SparseArray`KrylovLinearSolve[A,b, "Method" -> "BiCGSTAB", "Preconditioner" -> f]

should then be equivalent to

    LinearSolve[A,b, Method -> {"Krylov", "Method" -> "BiCGSTAB", "Preconditioner" -> "ILU0"}]

Other supported Krylov methods are `"ConjugateGradient"` (only for symmetric positive-definite matrices) and `"GMRES"`
See the documentation of `LinearSolve`, section Options, subsection Methods subsubsection "Krylov".

Using ``SparseArray`KrylovLinearSolve`` allows you to use your own preconditioners. For example,

    f = x \[Function] Evaluate[1/Diagonal[A] x]

is the well-known [Jacobi preconditioner](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preconditioner#Jacobi_(or_diagonal)_preconditioner) (
-- or rather its inverse. In constrast to the mathematical nomenclature, a preconditioner itself gets applied, not its inverse, in Mathematica. That's very plausible from an algorithmic point pf view.

See [this](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preconditioner#Jacobi_(or_diagonal)_preconditioner) and the standard literature about numerical linear equations for more information about what a preconditioner is. Basically, a preconditioner is meant to speed up the convergence of iterative linear solvers. Expanding on that would be out of scope for this site.