Because you are talking about a CMS, I'm going to assume you are deploying into hosted environments where you might not have command line access.
Now, before I give you the link I want to state that this is a BAD idea. XML is way too verbose to transfer large amounts of data. Further, although it is relatively easy to pull data out, putting it back in will be difficult and a very time consuming development project in itself.
Next alert: as Denis suggested, you are going to miss all of your stored procedures, functions, etc. Your best bet is to use the normal sql server backup / restore process. (Incidentally, I upvoted his answer).
Finally, the last time I dealt with XML and SQL Server we noticed interesting issues that cropped up when data exceeded a 64KB boundary. Basically, at 63.5KB, the queries ran very quickly (200ms). At 64KB, the query times jumped to over a minute and sometimes quite a bit longer. We didn't bother testing anything over 100KB as that was taking 5 minutes on a fast/dedicated server with zero load.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms188273.aspx
See this for putting it back in:
How to insert FOR AUTO XML result into table?
For kicks, here is a link talking about pulling the data out as json objects: http://weblogs.asp.net/thiagosantos/archive/2008/11/17/get-json-from-sql-server.aspx
you should also read (not for the faint of heart): http://www.simple-talk.com/sql/t-sql-programming/consuming-json-strings-in-sql-server/
Of course, the commentors all recommend building something using a CLR approach, but that's probably not available to you in a shared database hosting environment.
At the end of the day, if you are truly insistent on this madness, you might be better served by simply iterating through your table list and exporting all the data to standard CSV files. Then, iterating the CSV files to load the data back in ala C# - is there a way to stream a csv file into database?
Bear in mind that ALL of the above methods suffer from
- long processing times due to the data overhead; which leads to
- a high potential for failure due to the various time outs (page processing, command, connection, etc); and,
- if your data model changes between the time it was exported and reimported then you're back to writing custom translation code and ultimately screwed anyway.
So, only do this if you really really have to and are at least somewhat of a masochist at heart. If the purpose is simply to transfer some data from one installation to another, you might consider using one of the tools like SQL Compare and SQL Data Compare from RedGate to handle the transfer.
I don't care how much (or little) you make, the $1500 investment in their developer bundle is much cheaper than the months of time you are going to spend doing this, fixing it, redoing it, fixing it again, etc. (for the record I do NOT work for them. Their products are just top notch.)