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When a network device like a switch or a router comes the first time on-line, a fair amount of manual configuration has
to happen before it is fully functional. At minimum, it needs to be updated to the proper software image and a golden
configuration. Day zero automation techniques automate these processes, bringing up network devices into a functional
state with minimal to no-touch. Hence the name Zero touch. The goal of Zero touch is to enable you to plug in a new
network device and have it configured and transitioned into production automatically without the need for manual
configuration. For this purpose Cisco offers (at least) three different ways.
- [Autoinstall](/autoinstall/)
- [Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP)](/ztp/)
- [Plug and Play (PnP)](/pnp/)
This is a collection of some basic scripts to get these things up and running. All thes methods expect the devices in a factory reset state.
You can reset a device by issuing the command
```
pnpa service reset no-prompt
```
or on older systems
```
write memory
write erase
reload
```
---
### Want to Contribute?
Nice ;-) Have a look at the [contribution guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md "Contributing")
With [**_autoinstall_**](/autoinstall/) you can update and configury many different devices at the same time in a fully automated way. The devices can be **IOS or IOS-XE** devices able of running **EEM** scripts.
With [**_ZTP_**](/ztp/) you can update and configure many of different devices at the same time in a fully automated way. ZTP uses the **day0 pyton guest shell** on **IOS-XE** devices.
With [**_PnP_**](/pnp/) you can update and configure many of different devices at the same time in a fully automated way. PnP uses the Cisco Plug and Play protocol. This available on most(?) **IOS-XE** devices.