Release Notes for Cisco Network Plug and Play, Release 1.1x
Supported Platforms and Software Requirements
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
These release notes apply to the following software release of the Cisco Network Plug and Play Solution:
■General Availability Release 1.1
These release notes contain the following sections:
■Supported Platforms and Software Requirements
■Upgrade and Downgrade Support
■Upgrading a Cisco Catalyst 3650 or 3850 Series Switch to Cisco IOS XE Denali 16.1.1 While Provisioning
The Cisco Network Plug and Play solution provides a simple, secure, unified, and integrated offering for enterprise network customers to ease new branch or campus device deployments or for provisioning updates to an existing network. The solution provides a unified approach to provision enterprise networks comprised of Cisco routers, switches, and wireless access point devices with a near zero touch deployment experience.
The following tables list Cisco routers, switches, wireless access points, and software releases that support the Cisco Plug and Play IOS Agent and the Cisco Network Plug and Play Solution.
Table 2 lists software releases that have limited feature support. For software releases not listed, all features are supported.
Note: Only official software releases obtained from the Cisco.com software download website are supported for image deployment. Engineering builds are not supported.
The Secure Unique Device Identifier (SUDI) feature that allows secure device authentication is available on the following platforms:
–819, with software release 15.5(3)M1
–4000 Series, with software release 15.5(3)S1
–3850 Series, with software release 3.6.3E or 16.1.2E
–3650 Series and 4500 Series with Supervisor 7-E/8-E, with software releases 3.6.3E, 3.7.3E, or 16.1.2E
Table 5 lists the supported upgrade paths for each supported release.
Table 6 lists the supported downgrade paths for each supported release.
The bulk import function is similar to adding new provisioning rules that can set a device to the pending state. When you export the project and device database, the application displays the correct device state. If you then import the saved database, the devices must contact the APIC-EM controller again to return to the provisioned state because the bulk import feature restores only the device provisioning rules and does not restore the state of devices.
Note the following considerations when using the Cisco Plug and Play Mobile App:
■After disconnecting the console cable from the network device, if you want to connect it to a different network device, you must first manually refresh the mobile app to reflect the correct status when connecting to the new device.
■If you have an iOS mobile device with a Redpark cable and are deploying multiple network devices, after you are done with one device, you must unplug the Redpark cable from both your mobile device and the network device to close the serial connection. If you do not disconnect the cable from your mobile device, the serial session is not closed and the wrong configuration could be deployed on the next device.
The Cisco Network Plug and Play application on APIC-EM can support the following:
■A maximum of 10000 devices pre-provisioned in the Cisco Network Plug and Play application for APIC-EM, of which a maximum of 4000 can be router and switch devices and the remainder can be wireless access point devices
■A maximum of 50 devices of all types simultaneously contacting the server and being provisioned
■A maximum of 200 unclaimed devices of all types in the Cisco Network Plug and Play application for APIC-EM
See the Release Notes for Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller Enterprise Module for APIC-EM device support guidelines.
This section applies if you have a Cisco Catalyst 3650 or 3850 Series switch with a software release of Cisco IOS XE 3.6.3, 3.7.2, or earlier, it is in a factory default state (unprovisioned in the network), and at the same time as provisioning you want to upgrade it to Cisco IOS XE Denali 16.1.1E.
Such devices with older software releases fail the normal upgrade process to release 16.1.1E, however, you can use the Cisco Network Plug and Play application to do the upgrade while provisioning the device, by using the following steps:
Prerequisite: The Cisco network device to be provisioned is in a factory default state and can be auto-booted with the 16.1.1E image. If you are using a network device that was previously configured or is in an unknown state, see the reset details in the Solution Guide for Cisco Network Plug and Play.
1. Put the Cisco IOS XE Denali 16.1.1E image on a TFTP server that is accessible to the device you are upgrading.
2. Create a configuration file for the device and add the following lines to the end of the file, which will upgrade the software and reload the switch:
The tftp URL must include the IP address of the TFTP server ( ip-address), the directory in which the image resides ( dir), and image filename ( filename).
3. Upload the configuration file in the Cisco Network Plug and Play application, by using the Upload button in the Configurations tab.
4. Add the configuration file to the device information, either in the Projects tab (for a new device that you are preprovisioning) or in the Unplanned Devices tab (for an unclaimed device that is already installed but not yet provisioned).
5. If the device is unclaimed, click Claim to provision it, or if you are preprovisioning a device that is not yet installed, it is automatically provisioned when it is installed. Note that it takes about 25 minutes for the upgrade to complete and there is minimal console output from the device during the process.
6. Verify that device status is Provisioned in the Cisco Network Plug and Play GUI.
7. Verify that the device is successfully deployed by checking the log messages by clicking on the device serial number. Look for the message, “Device was successfully deployed!!”
8. Verify that the installed software release is Denali 16.1.1E by using the show version command on the device.
■ Solution Guide for Cisco Network Plug and Play —Solution Guide for the Cisco Network Plug and Play solution.
■ Configuration Guide for Cisco Network Plug and Play on Cisco APIC-EM —Describes how to use the Network Plug and Play application in the APIC-EM to configure Cisco network devices.
■ Cisco Open Plug-n-Play Agent Configuration Guide —Describes how to configure the Cisco Open Plug-n-Play Agent software application that runs on a Cisco IOS or IOS-XE device.
■ Mobile Application User Guide for Cisco Network Plug and Play —Describes how to use the Cisco Network Plug and Play mobile application.
■ Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller Enterprise Module Deployment Guide —Describes how to deploy and troubleshoot the Cisco APIC-EM.
■ Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller Enterprise Module Configuration Guide —Describes how to configure settings for the Cisco APIC-EM.
■ Release Notes for the Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller Enterprise Module —Release Notes for the Cisco APIC-EM.
■ Cisco APIC-EM Quick Start Guide —Guide to getting started with the APIC-EM and including a list of related documentation (available in the APIC-EM GUI).
■ Open Source Used In Cisco APIC-EM —List of open source code used in the Cisco APIC-EM.
■ Open Source Used In Cisco IWAN App Release 1 —List of open source code used in the Cisco IWAN and Cisco Network Plug and Play applications for APIC-EM.
For information on obtaining documentation, using the Cisco Bug Search Tool (BST), submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see What’s New in Cisco Product Documentation.
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