• It sounds like you're almost using the tool backwards. We've been spending all our time working on the schema, in source control, and then we automate getting it out to databases. Once we started using this tool, no development was done on a database that we had to automate getting into source control. It's a paradigm shift, but you have to look at source control as your authoritative source of the database under development, not the database itself.

    "The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood"
    - Theodore Roosevelt

    Author of:
    SQL Server Execution Plans
    SQL Server Query Performance Tuning