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When you are saying manage a data warehouse, what kind of tasks are you talking about?

Much of the management I would do in T-SQL (purging, archiving, transforming) - the interface to that can be very thin (even non-existent).

OK, based on your comment I would have the code which does all the work in a stored procs with a .NET assembly (typical API class library), as much in stored procs as possible, with the assembly for stuff which is easier done there or which requires COM or whatever. I would then either wrap the class library in cmdlets or just call the .NET objects from PowerShell (remember that PowerShell can instantiate objects.).

Now you have a .NET library which can also be called from web pages, GUI apps, whatever, if you ever want it, and you have a cmdlet and a direct .NET interface - plus the option of calling them from SQL if they are fully implemented at the SQL layer.

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When you are saying manage a data warehouse, what kind of tasks are you talking about?

Much of the management I would do in T-SQL (purging, archiving, transforming) - the interface to that can be very thin (even non-existent).