It offers 4 backends:

XML (default)
SQLite
MySQL/MariaDB
PostgreSQL

You have to install the desired backend libs in most cases to be offered the option of using it.

The default requires no special effort.

Many Linux distros also come with SQLite support by default, so mileage varies.

MySQL/Maria & Postgres almost always require intentional lib installation and if I'm not mistaken, specific build flags.

Check the wiki for more specific and up to date info.

Regards,
Adrien

On 4/26/22 3:28 AM, Chris Green wrote:
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 06:36:30PM +1200, grant wrote:
So I have rebuilt my laptop, recovered my databases and installed Gnucash
4.1 but I cannot connect to mysql databases. When I click file, open there
is no option for mysql. This is under Fedora 35Sent from my Galaxy

I don't believe GnuCash works with mysql (or the equivalent mariadb),
the only database storage option that I'm aware of is sqlite.


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