After your plugin is written, you must compile it and install
          it. The procedure for compiling shared objects varies from
          system to system. If you build your library using
          CMake, it should be able to generate the
          correct compilation commands for your system. If the library
          is named somepluglib, you should end up
          with a shared library file that has a name something like
          somepluglib.so. (The
          .so file name suffix might differ on your
          system.)
        
          To use CMake, you'll need to set up the
          configuration files to enable the plugin to be compiled and
          installed. Use the plugin examples under the
          plugin directory of a MySQL source
          distribution as a guide.
        
          Create CMakeLists.txt, which should look
          something like this:
        
MYSQL_ADD_PLUGIN(somepluglib somepluglib.c
  MODULE_ONLY MODULE_OUTPUT_NAME "somepluglib")
          When CMake generates the
          Makefile, it should take care of passing
          to the compilation command the
          -DMYSQL_DYNAMIC_PLUGIN flag, and passing to
          the linker the -lmysqlservices flag, which
          is needed to link in any functions from services provided
          through the plugin services interface. See
          MySQL Plugin Services.
        
Run CMake, then run make:
$> cmake .
$> make
          If you need to specify configuration options to
          CMake, see
          MySQL Source-Configuration Options, for a list.
          For example, you might want to specify
          CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX to indicate
          the MySQL base directory under which the plugin should be
          installed. You can see what value to use for this option with
          SHOW VARIABLES:
        
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'basedir';
+---------------+------------------+
| Variable_name | Value            |
+---------------+------------------+
| base          | /usr/local/mysql |
+---------------+------------------+
          The location of the plugin directory where you should install
          the library is given by the
          plugin_dir system variable.
          For example:
        
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'plugin_dir';
+---------------+-----------------------------------+
| Variable_name | Value                             |
+---------------+-----------------------------------+
| plugin_dir    | /usr/local/mysql/lib/mysql/plugin |
+---------------+-----------------------------------+To install the plugin library, use make:
$> make installVerify that make install installed the plugin library in the proper directory. After installing it, make sure that the library permissions permit it to be executed by the server.