General Settings
Chapter 13: Configuring General Settings
Establish the foundational identity, time zone, and default authentication for your POD.
⚠️ Configuration Access Required
Required Role: POD Admin or Organization Admin
Required Scope: POD level only
Restriction: Module disabled when Organization or Hierarchy View selected
Overview: Defining Your POD's Foundational DNA
The CONFIGURE → General Settings page is where you define the foundational "DNA" for your POD. The settings here—its name, its operational time zone, and its default access credentials—act as the baseline for many other functions throughout EDCC.
Think of this page as filling out the official "birth certificate" for your POD. Getting these core settings right from the beginning is essential for ensuring that all subsequent automated tasks, event logs, and management actions operate in a consistent and predictable manner.
Important: Save Your Changes
Any changes made on this page, whether to the POD's name, time zone, or default credentials, must be saved by clicking the Apply button in the top-right corner to take effect.
Configuring the POD's Core Identity
This interface contains the four essential parameters that define your POD's identity and default behaviors.

POD Name
The Display Name:
This is the human-readable name for your POD that appears throughout the UI, including the Management Tree. Why it matters: A clear, descriptive name (e.g., "Data Center A - Production") is critical for easy identification, especially in environments with many PODs, preventing accidental changes to the wrong environment.
Country
Geographical Location:
The country where the POD is physically located. Why it matters: This setting works with the Time Zone to provide geographical context, which is useful for asset management and global operations planning.
Time Zone
The Operational Clock:
The local time zone of the POD. This is one of the most critical settings on this page. It dictates the timing of all scheduled and logged activities. (See detailed explanation below).
BMC Credential (ID / Password)
The Default Handshake:
The default username and password that EDCC will use to communicate with new nodes added to this POD. Why it matters: This standardizes and simplifies the onboarding process for new hardware. (See detailed explanation below).
Deep Dive: The Critical Importance of the Time Zone Setting
Setting an accurate time zone is crucial for consistent and predictable operations. It becomes the standard for all time-sensitive operations and displays within this POD, preventing dangerous mistakes like running maintenance during peak business hours.
Key Areas Affected by Time Zone
Firmware Provisioning
The maintenance window schedule you create in Chapter 10 runs based on the POD's local time
An incorrect setting here could cause updates to run at 3 PM instead of 3 AM
Event Logs
All timestamps in both the global Event Log and the node-specific BMC SEL are displayed according to this time zone
Essential for accurately troubleshooting and correlating events across different systems
Dashboard & UI
All "Last Updated" timestamps and activity logs across the EDCC interface will use this time zone
Provides consistent time reference for all administrators, regardless of where they are located
Critical Warning: Time zone errors can cause scheduled maintenance to run during business hours, potentially causing unexpected downtime.
Deep Dive: Managing the Default BMC Credential
The BMC Credential you set on this page acts as the default authentication method for the entire POD. It's the "master key" EDCC uses to initially manage your nodes.
How Default Authentication Works
Process: When you add a new node to this POD from the System > Inventory list, EDCC will automatically attempt to log in and manage it using this username and password. This streamlines the onboarding process significantly.
Handling Credential Exceptions
Individual Overrides: If a specific node within the POD must use a different credential for security or legacy reasons, you can set it manually. Navigate to that node's MANAGE → Node Detail → Summary tab, enter the unique credentials in the Device Management panel, and click Apply.
Best Practice: Enforce a Strong, Standard Credential
For enhanced security, it is highly recommended to change this from the vendor default password. Use this setting to enforce a standard, strong BMC credential policy across your POD, and update it periodically according to your organization's security policies.
Chapter Summary & Key Takeaways
Time Zone is Critical: This setting controls the timing of all scheduled maintenance. Double-check it to avoid accidental downtime during business hours
Default Credential Simplifies Onboarding: The BMC Credential set here is automatically used for new nodes, making expansion easier
Individual Nodes Can Be Overridden: If a node has a unique password, you can set it on its Node Detail → Summary page
Click Apply: None of your changes take effect until you click the Apply button
Good Naming Prevents Errors: Use clear, descriptive POD names that indicate location and purpose
Security First: Use strong credentials and change them regularly according to security policies
What's Next: This completes the CONFIGURE module exploration. Part 4 will cover Administration and Platform Management, starting with centralized event logging.
💡 Pro Tip: Document your POD configuration decisions (naming conventions, time zones, credential policies) in your operational procedures - this ensures consistency as your infrastructure grows.