MySQL distributions contain a mysqlclient.pc
      file that provides information about MySQL configuration for use
      by the pkg-config command. This enables
      pkg-config to be used as an alternative to
      mysql_config for obtaining information such as
      compiler flags or link libraries required to compile MySQL
      applications. For example, the following pairs of commands are
      equivalent:
    
mysql_config --cflags
pkg-config --cflags mysqlclient
mysql_config --libs
pkg-config --libs mysqlclientThe last pkg-config command produces flags for dynamic linking. To produce flags for static linking, use this command:
pkg-config --static --libs mysqlclient
      On some platforms, the output with and without
      --static might be the same.
    
        
        
        If pkg-config does not find MySQL
        information, it might be necessary to set the
        PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable to the
        directory in which the mysqlclient.pc file
        is located, which by default is usually the
        pkgconfig directory under the MySQL library
        directory. For example (adjust the location appropriately):
      
# For sh, bash, ...
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/mysql/lib/pkgconfig
# For csh, tcsh, ...
setenv PKG_CONFIG_PATH /usr/local/mysql/lib/pkgconfig
        The mysqlconfig.pc installation location
        can be controlled using the
        INSTALL_PKGCONFIGDIR
        CMake option. See
        MySQL Source-Configuration Options.
      
      The --variable option takes a configuration
      variable name and displays the variable value:
    
# installation prefix directory
pkg-config --variable=prefix mysqlclient
# header file directory
pkg-config --variable=includedir mysqlclient
# library directory
pkg-config --variable=libdir mysqlclient
      To see which variable values pkg-config can
      display using the --variable option, use this
      command:
    
pkg-config --print-variables mysqlclientYou can use pkg-config within a command line using backticks to include the output that it produces for particular options. For example, to compile and link a MySQL client program, use pkg-config as follows:
gcc -c `pkg-config --cflags mysqlclient` progname.c
gcc -o progname progname.o `pkg-config --libs mysqlclient`