In short - is it a good design solution to implement most of the business logic in CLR stored procedures?
I have read much about them recently but I can't figure out when they should be used, what are the best practices, are they good enough or not.
For example, my business application needs to
parse a large fixed-length text file,
extract some numbers from each line in the file,
according to these numbers apply some complex business rules (involving regex matching, pattern matching against data from many tables in the database and such),
and as a result of this calculation update records in the database.
There is also a GUI for the user to select the file, view the results, etc.
This application seems to be a good candidate to implement the classic 3-tier architecture: the Data Layer, the Logic Layer, and the GUI layer.
The Data Layer would access the database
The Logic Layer would run as a WCF service and implement the business rules, interacting with the Data Layer
The GUI Layer would be a means of communication between the Logic Layer and the User.
Now, thinking of this design, I can see that most of the business rules may be implemented in a SQL CLR and stored in SQL Server. I might store all my raw data in the database, run the processing there, and get the results. I see some advantages and disadvantages of this solution:
Pros:
The business logic runs close to the data, meaning less network traffic.
Process all data at once, possibly utilizing parallelizm and optimal execution plan.
Cons:
Scattering of the business logic: some part is here, some part is there.
Questionable design solution, may encounter unknown problems.
Difficult to implement a progress indicator for the processing task.
I would like to hear all your opinions about SQL CLR. Does anybody use it in production? Are there any problems with such design? Is it a good thing?