There are no "sys" tables in VistaDB. There is a [database schema] table that contains most of what you need though.
[database schema]
You can get the identity columns for a database using the database schema table like this:
select * from [database schema] where typeid = 6
Look in the help file for the typeid list and what they mean.
Then once you have the list, you can match it up to the typeid for tables to see what table the identity column came from.
The only catch with the database schema table is that you cannot self reference or join it to itself (design limitation). So if you need to pull and reference from itself you have to do it in two commands, or through a temp table. The help file has an example of how to do this as well.
Alternate Way
You can also find all the identity columns using a VistaDB stored proc:
select * from VistaDBColumnSchema() where is_identity = true
DDA
If you need to find the next value, seed, etc you can also get those through DDA (Direct Data Access) methods.
The Identities property on an IVistaDBTableSchema object is a collection of the identities for that table. That collection can then be walked to pull the individual values.
The identity information included is the Seed, Step, Tablename, and Columnname.
ADO.NET GetSchemaTable Way
And yes, there is still another way. You can call GetSchemaTable on a reader to get some more information about the underlying structure.
using (VistaDBConnection cn = new VistaDBConnection("Data Source=" + dbName))
{
cn.Open();
using (VistaDBCommand cmd = new VistaDBCommand("Select * from simpletable", cn))
{
using (VistaDBDataReader myReader = cmd.ExecuteReader(CommandBehavior.KeyInfo))
{
//Retrieve column schema into a DataTable.
DataTable schemaTable = myReader.GetSchemaTable();
foreach (DataRow myField in schemaTable.Rows)
{
foreach (DataColumn myProperty in schemaTable.Columns)
{
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(myProperty.ColumnName + " = " + myField[myProperty].ToString());
}
}
}
}
}