Sqldw Authoring Cli
Execute authoring T-SQL (DDL, DML, data ingestion, transactions, schema changes) against Microsoft Fabric Data Warehouse and SQL endpoints from agentic CLI environments. Use when the user wants to: (1) create/alter/drop tables from terminal, (2) insert/update/delete/merge data via CLI, (3) run COPY INTO or OPENROWSET ingestion, (4) manage transactions or stored procedures, (5) perform schema evolution, (6) use time travel or snapshots, (7) generate ETL/ELT shell scripts, (8) create views/functions/procedures on Lakehouse SQLEP. Triggers: "create table in warehouse", "insert data via T-SQL", "load from ADLS", "COPY INTO", "run ETL with T-SQL", "alter warehouse table", "upsert with T-SQL", "merge into warehouse", "create T-SQL procedure", "warehouse time travel", "recover deleted warehouse data", "create warehouse schema", "deploy warehouse", "transaction conflict", "snapshot isolation error".
30-Second Summary
Sqldw Authoring Cli is an agent-readable workflow from microsoft/skills-for-fabric for sqldw authoring cli.
It gives the agent a trigger, ordered guidance, and source-backed checks instead of treating sqldw authoring cli as a generic tool.
Use it as a brief only while the linked SKILL.md remains available and the risk boundary is still accurate.
1-Minute Read
What it is
Sqldw Authoring Cli packages instructions from microsoft/skills-for-fabric into a reusable agent skill brief. The original source is a public SKILL.md file, so the brief can point readers back to the executable workflow instead of a product landing page.
When to use it
Use it when a user asks for help around sqldw authoring cli and the agent needs a repeatable workflow, checklist, or review path rather than broad background information.
How to test it first
Open the linked SKILL.md, confirm the trigger and procedure still match sqldw authoring cli, list the risk boundary, then ask the agent to apply the smallest read-only step to a sample task.
Watch out
Do not present this as a generic app or platform. Keep the scope tied to microsoft/skills-for-fabric. Risk boundary: git state, commit, branch, PR, or push actions require explicit repo-owner approval before mutation; CI/CD, deploy, release, rollback, and migration steps must start with read-only inspection and an approval gate; database, Fabric workspace, notebook, lakehouse, warehouse, or Power BI changes need credential and production-data approval; cloud resources, RBAC, credentials, tokens, and private keys must not be changed or exposed without a separate approval; Microsoft Fabric-specific workflow; do not describe it as a generic data engineering skill.