MySQL 5.7 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6
    The Perl DBI module provides a generic interface
    for database access. You can write a DBI script that works with many
    different database engines without change. To use DBI with MySQL,
    install the following:
  
        The DBI module.
      
        The DBD::mysql module. This is the DataBase
        Driver (DBD) module for Perl.
      
Optionally, the DBD module for any other type of database server you want to access.
    Perl DBI is the recommended Perl interface. It replaces an older
    interface called mysqlperl, which should be
    considered obsolete.
  
These sections contain information about using Perl with MySQL and writing MySQL applications in Perl:
For installation instructions for Perl DBI support, see Section 2.12, “Perl Installation Notes”.
For an example of reading options from option files, see Section 5.7.4, “Using Client Programs in a Multiple-Server Environment”.
For secure coding tips, see Section 6.1.1, “Security Guidelines”.
For debugging tips, see Section 5.8.1.4, “Debugging mysqld under gdb”.
For some Perl-specific environment variables, see Section 4.9, “Environment Variables”.
For considerations for running on macOS, see Section 2.4, “Installing MySQL on macOS”.
For ways to quote string literals, see Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”.
DBI information is available at the command line, online, or in printed form:
        Once you have the DBI and
        DBD::mysql modules installed, you can get
        information about them at the command line with the
        perldoc command:
      
$>perldoc DBI$>perldoc DBI::FAQ$>perldoc DBD::mysql
        You can also use pod2man,
        pod2html, and so on to translate this
        information into other formats.
      
For online information about Perl DBI, visit the DBI website, http://dbi.perl.org/. That site hosts a general DBI mailing list.
For printed information, the official DBI book is Programming the Perl DBI (Alligator Descartes and Tim Bunce, O'Reilly & Associates, 2000). Information about the book is available at the DBI website, http://dbi.perl.org/.