Question # 1
An engineer needs to configure a standardized template for all Panorama-managed
firewalls. These settings will be configured on a template named "Global" and will be
included in all template stacks.
Which three settings can be configured in this template? (Choose three.) A. Log Forwarding profile
B. SSL decryption exclusion
C. Email scheduler
D. Login banner
E. Dynamic updates
Reveal Answer
B. SSL decryption exclusion
D. Login banner
E. Dynamic updates
Explanation:
Templates in Panorama are used to configure Network and Device tab settings on managed firewalls. When creating a standardized template like “Global,” you’re defining base system-level configurations that apply across all devices in the stack. The following three settings are valid and supported within a Panorama template:
SSL Decryption Exclusion: Configured under Device > Certificate Management > SSL Decryption Exclusion. This allows you to exclude specific sites or categories from SSL decryption globally. ✅ Valid template setting
Login Banner: Set under Device > Setup > Management > General Settings. The login banner is a system-level message shown during CLI or GUI login and is managed via templates. ✅ Valid template setting
Dynamic Updates: Managed under Device > Dynamic Updates. You can configure update schedules and sources for Antivirus, Threat, WildFire, and App-ID databases. ✅ Valid template setting
These are documented in Palo Alto’s Templates and Template Stacks guide.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Log Forwarding profile: Log Forwarding profiles are configured under Objects > Log Forwarding, which is part of Device Groups, not Templates. Templates cannot manage policy-based objects like log forwarding.
C. Email Scheduler: Email scheduler settings (used for reports and alerts) are part of Monitor > Reports and are managed via Device Groups or local firewall config—not via Templates.
Question # 2
An administrator is creating a new Dynamic User Group to quarantine users for suspicious
activity.
Which two objects can Dynamic User Groups use as match conditions for group
membership? (Choose two.) A. Source IP addressB. Dynamic tagsC. Static tags
D. Ldap attributes
Reveal Answer
B. Dynamic tagsD. Ldap attributes
Explanation:
A Dynamic User Group (DUG) is a user group whose membership changes automatically based on conditions. It’s especially useful for things like quarantining suspicious users.
DUGs can use the following as match conditions:
Dynamic Tags (B)
Tags can be automatically assigned by policy actions, scripts, or integrations (e.g., a firewall can tag a user if they trigger a threat log).
DUGs can then match on that tag to include the user.
LDAP Attributes (D)
You can build conditions based on user attributes pulled from LDAP (like department, title, group membership).
This allows role- or identity-based dynamic grouping.
❌ Why the others are wrong:
A. Source IP address
DUGs are tied to users, not IPs. While User-ID can map an IP → user, you can’t directly use a source IP as a DUG match condition.
C. Static tags
Static tags don’t change dynamically. DUGs are about changing membership.
You would use Dynamic Tags, not static.
📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Dynamic User Groups:
Question # 3
An administrator notices that an interface configuration has been overridden locally on a
firewall. They require all configuration to be managed from Panorama and overrides are not
allowed.
What is one way the administrator can meet this requirement? A. Perform a commit force from the CLI of the firewall.B. Perform a template commit push from Panorama using the "Force Template Values"
option.C. Perform a device-group commit push from Panorama using the "Include Device and
Network Templates" option.D. Reload the running configuration and perform a Firewall local commit.
Reveal Answer
B. Perform a template commit push from Panorama using the "Force Template Values"
option.
Explanation:
The core of this problem is resolving a configuration conflict between Panorama (the central manager) and a local firewall. When a setting is configured in both Panorama's template and locally on the firewall, it creates a "override." The requirement is to enforce Panorama's configuration and prevent any local deviations.
The "Force Template Values" option is specifically designed for this purpose. When you perform a template push with this option selected, Panorama will overwrite all local firewall configurations that are defined in the template, effectively removing the local overrides and ensuring the firewall's configuration matches Panorama's template exactly.
Why this works: It directly addresses the requirement to "meet this requirement" by eliminating the local override and establishing Panorama as the single source of truth for that template's settings.
Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Perform a commit force from the CLI of the firewall. A commit force is used to override a pending commit that is locked by another user or process. It does not resolve the conflict between Panorama and the local configuration. In fact, doing this from the firewall would commit the local override, making the problem worse from Panorama's perspective.
C. Perform a device-group commit push from Panorama using the "Include Device and Network Templates" option. This option simply ensures that both the Device Group (e.g., security policies, objects) and Template (e.g., interfaces, zones) configurations are pushed together. It does not forcibly overwrite local overrides. If there is a local override, this push may still fail or require manual resolution.
D. Reload the running configuration and perform a Firewall local commit. Reloading the configuration (e.g., a load config) would just re-read the existing configuration, which includes the local override. A local commit would then solidify that override. This action does nothing to align the firewall with Panorama and would further entrench the local change.
Reference:
Panorama Force Template Values Documentation
Question # 4
An enterprise network security team is deploying VM-Series firewalls in a multi-cloud
environment. Some firewalls are deployed in VMware NSX-V, while others are in AWS, and
all are centrally managed using Panorama with the appropriate plugins installed. The team
wants to streamline policy management by organizing the firewalls into device groups in
which the AWS-based firewalls act as a parent device group, while the NSX-V firewalls are
configured as a child device group to inherit Security policies. However, after configuring
the device group hierarchy and attempting to push configurations, the team receives errors,
and policy inheritance is not functioning as expected. What is the most likely cause of this
issue? A. Panorama must use the same plugin version numbers for both AWS and NSX-V
environments before device group inheritance can function properlyB. Panorama requires the objects to be overridden in the child device group before
firewalls in different hypervisors can inherit Security policiesC. Panorama by default does not allow different hypervisors in parent/child device groups,
but this can be overridden with the command "set device-group allow-multi-hypervisor
enable"D. Panorama does not support policy inheritance across device groups containing firewalls
deployed in different hypervisors when using multiple plugins
Reveal Answer
D. Panorama does not support policy inheritance across device groups containing firewalls
deployed in different hypervisors when using multiple plugins
Explanation:
Panorama uses plugins to manage cloud-specific integrations and configurations for VM-Series firewalls (e.g., AWS plugin for Amazon Web Services, NSX plugin for VMware NSX). Each plugin generates unique configuration elements tailored to its respective cloud environment.
Key Issue:
When firewalls with different plugins (e.g., AWS and NSX-V) are placed in a parent-child device group hierarchy, Panorama cannot reconcile the incompatible plugin-specific configurations during policy inheritance.
For example, AWS-based firewalls require settings like IAM roles or VPC tags, while NSX-V firewalls need NSX-specific network mappings. These configurations are mutually exclusive and cannot be inherited across plugins.
This incompatibility results in errors when pushing policies, as Panorama attempts to apply irrelevant or conflicting settings to firewalls in the child group.
Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Mismatched plugin versions might cause issues, but even with identical versions, mixing plugin types (AWS vs. NSX-V) is fundamentally unsupported.
B. Overriding objects in the child group does not resolve the core incompatibility between hypervisor-specific plugins. Inheritance fails at the plugin level, not just at the object level.
C. There is no CLI command set device-group allow-multi-hypervisor enable. This is a fabricated option; Panorama does not allow overriding this restriction.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: The Panorama administrator guide explicitly states that device groups must contain firewalls with consistent deployment environments (e.g., all AWS or all NSX) for inheritance to work. Mixing plugins breaks inheritance.
PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 5: Panorama): Understanding device group constraints and plugin compatibility is essential for centralized management in multi-cloud deployments.
Question # 5
An administrator is using Panorama to manage multiple firewalls. After upgrading all
devices to the latest PAN-OS software, the administrator enables log forwarding from the
firewalls to Panorama.
However, pre-existing logs from the firewalls are not appearing in Panorama.
Which action should be taken to enable the firewalls to send their pre-existing logs to
Panorama? A. Export the log database.B. Use the import option to pull logs.
C. Use the scp logdb export command.
D. Use the ACC to consolidate the logs.
Reveal Answer
C. Use the scp logdb export command.
Explanation:
When you configure log forwarding from firewalls to Panorama, only new logs generated after enabling the feature are forwarded.
Pre-existing logs already stored on the local firewall’s log database will not be automatically sent to Panorama.
To move old logs, you need to manually export them from the firewall log database and import them into Panorama .
The correct method is to run the scp logdb export command on the firewall, which securely copies the firewall’s log database to Panorama (or another SCP server for import).
Why not the others?
A. Export the log database → too vague; doesn’t specify the actual mechanism (SCP is required).
B. Use the import option to pull logs → Panorama cannot pull logs from firewalls; logs must be pushed/exported.
D. Use the ACC to consolidate the logs → ACC (Application Command Center) only summarizes existing logs; it cannot retrieve old logs from firewalls.
Question # 6
When using certificate authentication for firewall administration, which method is used for
authorization? A. LocalB. RadiusC. KerberosD. LDAP
Reveal Answer
A. Local
Explanation:
When using certificate-based authentication for firewall administration, the authorization method used is Local. Here's why:
Certificate authentication validates the identity of the administrator using a client certificate.
Once authenticated, the firewall uses its local configuration to determine what roles and permissions the authenticated user has.
This means the firewall must have a locally defined admin account that matches the certificate’s identity (usually the Common Name or Subject).
So, even though the authentication is done via certificate, the authorization—which determines what the admin can do—is handled locally.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. RADIUS, C. Kerberos, and D. LDAP are external authentication methods. They can be used for username/password-based authentication, but not for certificate-based admin login authorization.
Valid Reference:
PCNSE Video Series: Authentication & Authorization
Pass4Success PCNSE Discussion – Certificate Authentication Authorization Method
Question # 7
An administrator needs to validate that policies that will be deployed will match the
appropriate rules in the device-group hierarchy. Which tool can the administrator use to
review the policy creation logic and verify that unwanted traffic is not allowed? A. Preview Changes
B. Managed Devices Health
C. Test Policy Match
D. Policy Optimizer
Reveal Answer
C. Test Policy Match
Explanation:
Why "Test Policy Match"?
1.Purpose:
The Test Policy Match tool (in Panorama or firewall) allows administrators to simulate traffic against the policy rulebase before deployment.
It checks which rule matches specific traffic (source, destination, application, etc.) and validates if the intended behavior (allow/deny) occurs.
2.Key Benefits:
Identifies rule misconfigurations (e.g., overly permissive rules).
Ensures policies align with security requirements without live traffic.
Why Not Other Options?
A. Preview Changes Shows configuration diffs (e.g., new rules), but doesn’t test traffic matching.
B. Managed Devices Health Monitors device status, not policy logic.
D. Policy Optimizer Recommends rule adjustments based on logs, but doesn’t simulate traffic.
How to Use:
In Panorama, go to: Policies > Security > Test Policy Match.
Enter traffic parameters (e.g., source IP, destination IP, application).
Review which rule matches and the action (allow/deny).
Reference:
Palo Alto Admin Guide:
"Test Policy Match validates rule precedence and traffic handling before commit."
How to Pass PCNSE Exam?
PCNSE certification validates your expertise in designing, deploying, configuring, and managing Palo Alto Networks firewalls and Panorama, making it essential to thoroughly understand both the concepts and practical applications.
Official PCNSE Study Guide is an excellent resource to help you prepare effectively. Consider enrolling in official training courses like the Firewall Essentials: Configuration and Management (EDU-210) or Panorama: Managing Firewalls at Scale (EDU-220). Setting up a lab environment using Palo Alto firewalls, either physical or virtual, allows you to practice configuring and managing the platform in real-world scenarios. Focus on key tasks such as configuring security policies, NAT, VPNs, and high availability, as well as implementing App-ID, Content-ID, and User-ID.
Our PCNSE practice test help you identify areas where you need improvement and familiarize you with the exam format and question types.
Engaging with the Palo Alto Networks community through forums like the LIVE Community or Reddit can also provide valuable insights and tips from others who have taken the Palo Alto certified network security engineer exam.