If Perl reports that it cannot find the
      ../mysql/mysql.so module, the problem is
      probably that Perl cannot locate the
      libmysqlclient.so shared library. You should
      be able to fix this problem by one of the following methods:
- Copy - libmysqlclient.soto the directory where your other shared libraries are located (probably- /usr/libor- /lib).
- Modify the - -Loptions used to compile- DBD::mysqlto reflect the actual location of- libmysqlclient.so.
- On Linux, you can add the path name of the directory where - libmysqlclient.sois located to the- /etc/ld.so.conffile.
- Add the path name of the directory where - libmysqlclient.sois located to the- LD_RUN_PATHenvironment variable. Some systems use- LD_LIBRARY_PATHinstead.
      Note that you may also need to modify the -L
      options if there are other libraries that the linker fails to
      find. For example, if the linker cannot find
      libc because it is in /lib
      and the link command specifies -L/usr/lib, change
      the -L option to -L/lib or add
      -L/lib to the existing link command.
    
      If you get the following errors from
      DBD::mysql, you are probably using
      gcc (or using an old binary compiled with
      gcc):
    
/usr/bin/perl: can't resolve symbol '__moddi3'
/usr/bin/perl: can't resolve symbol '__divdi3'
      Add -L/usr/lib/gcc-lib/... -lgcc to the link
      command when the mysql.so library gets built
      (check the output from make for
      mysql.so when you compile the Perl client).
      The -L option should specify the path name of the
      directory where libgcc.a is located on your
      system.
    
Another cause of this problem may be that Perl and MySQL are not both compiled with gcc. In this case, you can solve the mismatch by compiling both with gcc.