The new Database projects in Visual Studio provide source control and change scripts.
They have a nice tool that compares databases and can generate a script that converts the schema of one into the other, or updates the data in one to match the other.
The db schema is "shredded" to create many, many small .sql files, one per DDL command that describes the DB.
+tom
Additional info 2008-11-30
I have been using it as a developer for the past year and really like it. It makes it easy to compare my dev work to production and generate a script to use for the release. I don't know if it is missing features that DBAs need for "enterprise-type" projects.
Because the schema is "shredded" into sql files the source control works fine.
One gotcha is that you need to have a different mindset when you use a db project. The tool has a "db project" in VS, which is just the sql, plus an automatically generated local database which has the schema and some other admin data -- but none of your application data, plus your local dev db that you use for app data dev work. You rarely are aware of the automatically generated db, but you have to know its there so you can leave it alone :). This special db is clearly recognizable because it has a Guid in its name,
The VS DB Project does a nice job of integrating db changes that other team members have made into your local project/associated db. but you need to take the extra step to compare the project schema with your local dev db schema and apply the mods. It makes sense, but it seems awkward at first.
DB Projects are a very powerful tool. They not only generate scripts but can apply them immediately. Be sure not to destroy your production db with it. ;)
I really like the VS DB projects and I expect to use this tool for all my db projects going forward.
+tom