I understand the confusion. I think there are a few simple guidelines to follow:
If your class "owns" a reference to another object (i.e. your object created the other object, or was given the reference to that object with the understanding that your object now "owns" it), then you are responsible for doing any necessary cleanup (if any)
If that other object is a .NET object and does not implement the IDisposable interface, then you probably don't need to do anything. The IDisposable interface is, by convention, the interface that we use to declare whether or not our objects require cleanup.
If that other object is a .NET object and implements the IDisposable interface, then your class should also implement the IDisposable interface. In your Dispose method, just call the Dispose method of the other object.
If that other object is an unmanaged object or resource, then your class should implement a finalizer to ensure that the unmanaged object / resource will get cleaned up. Follow the guidelines described in that blog post for how to implement that.
Below are some specific answers to your questions.
- At some point, .NET is just wrapping Win32 calls, right? So aren't most of the .NET objects in a way an Unmanaged Resource?
Even though a .NET object may wrap Win32 calls, the term "Unmanaged Resource" is not appropriate because it is a .NET object, therefore it is by definition a "Managed Resource". The CLR handles the memory allocation and garbage collection for those objects.
- What about COM objects that we have .NET wrappers for -- what are they considered?
.NET wrapper objects are still .NET objects, so they are "managed resources", but note that they must implement their own dispose/finalize logic. Basically, they take care of cleaning up the "unmanaged resources" so that you don't have to. If you were implementing your own wrapper for a COM object, then you would be responsible for implementing the necessary dispose/finalize logic to clean it up, so that the consumers of your wrapper don't have to.
- What about managed classes that get functionality solely from P/Invokes?
A managed class that uses P/Invoke to call unmanaged code might be allocating unmanaged resources, depending on what it is calling. Therefore, it may be necessary for it to implement the necessary dispose/finalize logic to clean up those unmanaged resources.
- What about C++/CLI classes that internally use native libraries?
Yes, those also may be allocating unmanaged resources from the native libraries, so it would also be necessary for them to implement the necessary destructor/finalizer logic.
- At the C# level, the C++/CLI classes that had destructors now implement IDisposable... what are they considered?
In C++/CLI, you can choose to declare a class as either managed (with the ref keyword) or unmanaged (without the ref keyword). If it's declared with the ref keyword, then it is a managed class; it will be allocated on the managed heap and will be cleaned up by the garbage collector once it falls out of scope and there are no more references to it. If the class is declared without the ref keyword, then it is unmanaged and must be explicitly cleaned up. In either case, the class might have allocated unmanaged resources that need to be cleaned up in the destructor/finalizer.