Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 40.3Mb
PDF (A4) - 40.4Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 259.3Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 366.3Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.0Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.0Mb


MySQL 9.1 Reference Manual  /  MySQL 9.1 Frequently Asked Questions  /  MySQL 9.1 FAQ: C API, libmysql

A.13 MySQL 9.1 FAQ: C API, libmysql

Frequently asked questions about MySQL C API and libmysql.

A.13.1. What is “MySQL Native C API”? What are typical benefits and use cases?
A.13.2. Which version of libmysql should I use?
A.13.3. What if I want to use the “NoSQL” X DevAPI?
A.13.4. How to I download libmysql?
A.13.5. Where is the documentation?
A.13.6. How do I report bugs?
A.13.7. Is it possible to compile the library myself?

A.13.1.

What is MySQL Native C API? What are typical benefits and use cases?

libmysql is a C-based API that you can use in C applications to connect with the MySQL database server. It is also itself used as the foundation for drivers for standard database APIs like ODBC, Perl's DBI, and Python's DB API.

A.13.2.

Which version of libmysql should I use?

For MySQL 9.1 we recommend libmysql 9.1.

A.13.3.

What if I want to use the NoSQL X DevAPI?

For C-language and X DevApi Document Store for MySQL, we recommend MySQL Connector/C++. Connector/C++ has compatible C headers. (This is not applicable to MySQL 5.7 or before.)

A.13.4.

How to I download libmysql?

A.13.5.

Where is the documentation?

See MySQL 9.0 C API Developer Guide.

A.13.6.

How do I report bugs?

Please report any bugs or inconsistencies you observe to our Bugs Database. Select the C API Client as shown.

A.13.7.

Is it possible to compile the library myself?

Compiling MySQL Server also compiles libmysqlclient; there is not a way to only compile libmysqlclient. For related information, see MySQL C API Implementations.