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A colleague got this error message when trying to use MySQLdb from Django:

[...] ImproperlyConfigured("Error loading MySQLdb module: %s" % e) django.core.exceptions.ImproperlyConfigured: Error loading MySQLdb module: dlopen(/Users/roy/.python-eggs/MySQL_python-1.2.3c1-py2.5-macosx-10.5-i386.egg-tmp/_mysql.so, 2): Symbol not found: _mysql_affected_rows Referenced from: /Users/roy/.python-eggs/MySQL_python-1.2.3c1-py2.5-macosx-10.5-i386.egg-tmp/_mysql.so Expected in: dynamic lookup

He's using OS X 10.5, Python 2.5 (arriving with OS X), MySQL 5.1 & MySQLdb 1.2.3c1.

Any idea how to attack this?

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5 Answers

It might be best if you install mysql and it's Python bindings from scratch, I use the following steps whenever I need MySQLdb on OS X 10.4 or 10.5:

  1. Install MySQL for your system, the dmg installer should be sufficient

  2. The default location of MySQL will be somewhere around: /usr/local/mysql-5.0.45-osx10.4-i686. From /usr/local/mysql/lib, create a soft link:

    ln -s ../../mysql-5.0.45-osx10.4-i686/lib mysql

  3. Download the MySQLdb source and unpack it

  4. Edit the file site.cfg under your unpacked MySQLdb directory, comment out the registry_key and set mysql_config to:

    mysql_config = /usr/local/mysql-5.0.45-osx10.4-i686/bin/mysql_config

  5. Carry on with the regular Python packages build from within MySQLdb directory:

    sudo python setup.py install

  6. If everything is fine above, test MySQLdb in a new terminal:

    python -c "import MySQLdb"

The above should return nothing if successful. The above example shows OS 10.4 and MySQL 5.0, substitute them with the your proper tools version.

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Doesn't work on 10.6 – Nick Sergeant Aug 31 '09 at 17:21
The mysql 10.6 dmg is not out yet, once it's released, give it another whirl. – Thierry Lam Aug 31 '09 at 18:10
Thanks for this solution. It nearly worked on my system (OSX 10.7). However I need to add the -arch x86_64 flag to the compiler and linker flags. This is how I need to change the setup_posix.py from the MySQLdb-python package: in the section where the ext_options are build I changed extra_compile_args = extra_compile_args to extra_compile_args = extra_compile_args + ['-arch',"x86_64"] and extra_link_args = extra_link_args to extra_link_args = extra_link_args + ['-arch',"x86_64"] – spassig Nov 30 '11 at 16:03
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Yes, the MySQLDb egg was compiled against a different version of libmysqlclient than the version present in the system. You need to either get a proper egg (uninstalling the previous) or to build MySQLDb from scratch to compile it against the library present in your system.

I don't know why but I think your colleague might be interested in this question:

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1297917/configuring-django-to-use-remote-mysql-server

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I had trouble with Thierry's solution on 32-bit Python (2.6.5) on OS X 10.6.

Upgrading to Python 2.7 64-bit version fixed the problem for me.

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Thiery's instructions worked just fine for me with the MySQL 10.6 dmg and MySQLdb ver 1.2.3

It helps to start with a clean slate, so make sure you uninstall early versions of MySQL. Look at this post for uninstallation help How do you uninstall MySQL from Mac OS X?

Thanks!

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For linux users:

sudo apt-get install python-mysqldb 

took care of it for me ^-^.

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