Alex McLeish has agreed to become Scotland manager for the second time - 11 years after leaving the post.
McLeish, 59, will sign a deal until 2020 and is the unanimous choice of the Scottish FA board.
He replaces his former Aberdeen and Scotland team-mate Gordon Strachan, who left in October after the country did not qualify for the World Cup.
The Scottish FA failed in its attempt to recruit Michael O'Neill, who instead chose to stay with Northern Ireland.
McLeish 'has right credentials'
Walter Smith was also linked with the role, but ruled himself out of a return to the job he held for three years before leaving for Rangers in 2007.
McLeish's first games in charge will be against Costa Rica and Hungary next month, followed by further friendly matches in Peru in May and Mexico in June.
His debut competitive games will be the Uefa Nations League encounters against Albania at home on 10 September, then in Israel on 11 October.
Scotland have not reached a major finals since the 1998 World Cup in France and the Scottish FA is currently looking for a new chief executive to replace Stewart Regan.
McLeish, who won 77 caps for his country, told BBC Scotland in December that "the national job is something that would interest me" and that he still has "a lot to give the game".
His appointment will be officially announced on Friday morning.
McLeish succeeded Smith midway through the Euro 2008 qualifying campaign and came within one game of reaching those finals, only to lose to Italy.
However, after winning seven of his 10 games in charge, McLeish left for Birmingham City.
While there, he led the Blues to promotion to the English top flight and the 2011 League Cup.
Before that, he managed Motherwell, got Hibernian promoted, and won seven trophies - including two league titles - during a near five-year spell with Rangers.
Since leaving Birmingham in 2011, he has managed Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest, Genk in Belgium and Egyptian club Zamalek.
'I don't think he ever thought he'd get it' - analysis
BBC Scotland's senior football reporter Chris McLaughlin
McLeish has been very keen on taking the job but I'm not overly convinced he ever thought he would get it. However, as other candidates ruled themselves out, his name started to steadily rise to the top.
He's a passionate Scot who has been there and done it and he certainly has the gravitas to command respect in the dressing room.
But questions will be asked of the Scottish FA about progress and the process. Does giving a former Scotland manager another shot at the top job really show the country is moving forward? And just what went wrong in the process that the new man is clearly the second choice at best?
The fans will get behind him, though, and if he leads the nation to the promised land of the Euros in 2020, then the above won't matter.
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