I have personal experience with this particular problem. I even started down the road of writing my own wrapper for the C MySQL API.
The eventual conclusion was: Don't!
The solution that worked in my case was to communicate with the MySQL server via PHP. If you are familiar with web services, chances are that you know about PHP, so I don't won't go into loads of detail about that.
To read from the database:
- The cocoa app sends a request for a URL on the server: http://theserver.com/app/get_values.php
- The get_values.php script handles the database query, and returns the data in xml format
- The cocoa app loads and parses the xml
To write to the database:
- The cocoa app sends a more complex request to the server: http://theserver.com/app/put_values.php?name="john doe"&age=21&address=...
- The put_values.php script parses the input and writes to the database
The beauty of this solution is that PHP is great for working with MySQL, and cocoa has some handy built-in classes for working with XML data.
edit: one more thing:
One of the key things you have to figure out with this approach is how much processing should be done on the server, and how much should be done in the app itself. Let cocoa do the things that cocoa is good at, and let PHP and MySQL do the things that they are good at.
You could write a generic PHP script to handle all queries: perform_query.php?querystring="SELECT * FROM .....", but that is hardly an optimal solution. Your best bet is several smaller PHP scripts that handle individual datasets for you. In my case, there was one to get the list of users, one to get the list of transactions, etc. Again, it all depends on what your app is going to do.