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PCNSE Practice Test

At pcnsepracticetest.com, we offer expertly designed Palo Alto PCNSE practice test to help you gain the confidence and knowledge needed to pass the Palo Alto certified network security engineer exam on your first attempt. Our PCNSE exam questions are tailored to reflect the real exam experience, covering all critical topics such as firewall configuration, security policies, VPNs, threat prevention, and more.


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1. Exam-Aligned Questions: Our PCNSE practice exam is based on the latest exam objectives, ensuring you’re prepared for what’s on the actual exam.
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Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

Which Panorama feature protects logs against data loss if a Panorama server fails?
A. Panorama HA automatically ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the HA Cluster.
B. Panorama Collector Group with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the Collector Group.
C. Panorama HA with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the HA Cluster.
D. Panorama Collector Group automatically ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the Collector Group.


B. Panorama Collector Group with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the Collector Group.
Explanation:

1.Panorama Logging Options
Firewalls can send logs to Panorama for centralized logging.
To prevent log loss, Panorama supports Collector Groups — multiple Panorama log collectors working together.

2.Log Redundancy
If Log Redundancy is enabled on a Collector Group:
Each log is written to two collectors within the group.
If one collector fails, the other still has the log, ensuring no log loss.

3.Why Not the Other Options?
A. Panorama HA automatically ensures no log loss ❌
HA ensures management plane redundancy, but does not replicate logs between peers unless log redundancy is configured in a collector group.
C. Panorama HA with Log Redundancy ❌
Misleading: log redundancy is a collector group feature, not HA itself.
D. Panorama Collector Group automatically ensures no log loss ❌
Incorrect — redundancy is not automatic, you must explicitly enable Log Redundancy in the collector group.

Reference (Official Docs):
Palo Alto Networks — Collector Groups
🔗 Panorama Admin Guide – Collector Groups
“To prevent log loss, enable Log Redundancy in a Collector Group so that each log is forwarded to two log collectors in the group.”




Question # 2

What are three tasks that cannot be configured from Panorama by using a template stack? (Choose three.)
A. Change the firewall management IP address
B. Configure a device block list
C. Add administrator accounts
D. Rename a vsys on a multi-vsys firewall
E. Enable operational modes such as normal mode, multi-vsys mode, or FIPS-CC mode


A. Change the firewall management IP address
C. Add administrator accounts
E. Enable operational modes such as normal mode, multi-vsys mode, or FIPS-CC mode
Explanation:
Template Stacks in Panorama are used to push network and device-level configurations (e.g., interfaces, zones, virtual routers, DNS, NTP) to managed firewalls. However, certain system-level and administrative settings cannot be configured via templates and must be done directly on the firewall or in the device-specific context in Panorama.

Tasks That CANNOT Be Configured via Template Stack:
A. Change the firewall management IP address:
This is a device-specific system setting configured under Device > Setup > Management on the firewall itself or in the Device Settings for the specific firewall in Panorama. It cannot be defined in a shared template.
C. Add administrator accounts:
Administrator accounts are system-wide settings managed under Device > Administrators. These are not part of network configuration and are applied directly to the firewall's management plane, not pushed via templates.
E. Enable operational modes (e.g., normal, multi-vsys, FIPS-CC mode):
These are device-specific modes that define the fundamental operation of the firewall. They are set under Device > Setup > Operations on the local firewall and cannot be controlled by a template.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Configure a device block list:
This is a security policy object (Address or Address Group) that can be configured in a Device Group and pushed from Panorama. It is not a template-specific feature.
D. Rename a vsys on a multi-vsys firewall:
While vsys creation/deletion is device-specific, renaming a vsys can be done via a template if the vsys is managed by that template. The template defines the vsys structure and its name.

Reference:
PAN-OS documentation specifies that templates manage network settings, while device-specific configurations (e.g., management IP, admin accounts, operational modes) are configured in Device Settings or locally on the firewall (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "Templates" section). Operational modes like FIPS require a reboot and are immutable via templates.




Question # 3

An engineer is monitoring an active/active high availability (HA) firewall pair. Which HA firewall state describes the firewall that is experiencing a failure of a monitored path?
A. Initial
B. Tentative
C. Passive
D. Active-secondary


B. Tentative
Explanation:
In an active/active HA configuration, firewalls monitor specific interfaces or paths (e.g., data links) beyond just the HA control link. When a firewall detects a failure in one of these monitored paths (e.g., a critical data interface goes down), it enters the Tentative state.

Tentative State:
This is a transitional state where the firewall suspects a problem but has not yet taken action (like triggering a failover). It continues to communicate with its peer to determine the severity of the issue. If the path failure is confirmed, the firewall may then change state (e.g., to non-functional) and potentially trigger a failover if it affects its ability to process traffic.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Initial:
This is the state when the firewall is booting up and initializing HA, before it establishes communication with its peer.
C. Passive:
This state is used in active/passive HA, where the firewall is fully functional but does not process traffic unless the active peer fails. It is not a state for path monitoring failures.
D. Active-secondary:
This is a healthy state in active/active HA where the firewall is processing traffic for its assigned context (e.g., a specific vsys). It does not indicate a failure.

Reference:
PAN-OS HA documentation defines the Tentative state as the state a member enters when it detects a monitored interface or path failure but is still operational and communicating with its peer (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "High Availability States" section). This allows for graceful handling of partial failures without immediate, disruptive failovers.




Question # 4

A firewall administrator needs to check which egress interface the firewall will use to route the IP 10.2.5.3. Which command should they use?
A. test routing route ip 10.2.5.3 *
B. test routing route ip 10.2.5.3 virtual-router default
C. test routing fib-lookup ip 10.2.5.0/24 virtual-router default
D. test routing fib-lookup ip 10.2.5.3 virtual-router default


D. test routing fib-lookup ip 10.2.5.3 virtual-router default
Explanation:

Why This Command?
1.Purpose:
The command test routing fib-lookup checks the Forwarding Information Base (FIB) to determine the egress interface for a specific IP.
It simulates how the firewall will route the packet.

Syntax:
test routing fib-lookup ip virtual-router

Example:
test routing fib-lookup ip 10.2.5.3 virtual-router default

Why Not Other Options?
A.Invalid syntax (missing virtual-router parameter).
B.test routing route is for checking route table, not FIB.
C.Uses a subnet (10.2.5.0/24) instead of the specific IP (10.2.5.3).

Key Difference:
FIB is the optimized forwarding table derived from the routing table.
fib-lookup gives the actual egress interface, while route shows route table matches.

Reference:
Palo Alto CLI Reference:
"Use test routing fib-lookup to determine the egress interface for a destination IP."




Question # 5


Based on the screenshots above, and with no configuration inside the Template Stack itself, what access will the device permit on its Management port?
A. The firewall will allow HTTP Telnet, HTTPS, SSH, and Ping from IP addresses defined as $permitted-subnet-1.
B. The firewall will allow HTTP Telnet, HTTPS, SSH, and Ping from IP addresses defined as $permitted-subnet-2.
C. The firewall will allow HTTP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTPS, SSH and Ping from IP addresses defined as $permitted-subnet-1 and $permitted-subnet-2.
D. The firewall will allow HTTP, Telnet, HTTPS, SSH, and Ping from IP addresses defined as $permitted-subnet-1 and $permitted-subnet-2.


B. The firewall will allow HTTP Telnet, HTTPS, SSH, and Ping from IP addresses defined as $permitted-subnet-2.
Explanation:

Key Observations from the Screenshot:
1.Administrative Management Services:
Enabled Services: HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, SSH (explicitly listed).
Disabled Services: No mention of SNMP (though it appears under Network Services, it is not enabled for management access).
2.Permitted IP Addresses:
Only $permitted-subnet-2 is configured under PERMITTED IP ADDRESSES.
$permitted-subnet-1 is not listed, so it is not allowed.
3.Network Services:
Ping is enabled (under Network Services), but SNMP and others are separate from management access controls.

Why Not Other Options?
AIncorrectly includes $permitted-subnet-1, which is not configured.
CIncorrectly includes SNMP (not enabled for management) and $permitted-subnet-1.
DIncorrectly includes $permitted-subnet-1, which is absent.

Access Summary:
Allowed Protocols: HTTP, Telnet, HTTPS, SSH, Ping.
Permitted Source IPs: Only $permitted-subnet-2.

Reference:
Palo Alto Management Interface Documentation:
"Permitted IP addresses restrict management access to explicitly defined subnets."




Question # 6

An administrator is building Security rules within a device group to block traffic to and from malicious locations. How should those rules be configured to ensure that they are evaluated with a high priority?
A. Create the appropriate rules with a Block action and apply them at the top ol the Security Pre-Rules.
B. Create the appropriate rules with a Block action and apply them at the top of the Security Post-Rules.
C. Create the appropriate rules with a Block action and apply them at the top of the local firewall Security rules.
D. Create the appropriate rules with a Block action and apply them at the top of the Default Rules.


A. Create the appropriate rules with a Block action and apply them at the top ol the Security Pre-Rules.
Explanation:
In Panorama-managed environments, Security Pre-Rules are evaluated before local firewall rules and Security Post-Rules. To ensure that block rules targeting malicious traffic are enforced with high priority, they should be placed at the top of the Security Pre-Rules within the relevant device group.

This guarantees that:
The rules are evaluated before any local or post-rule policies
Malicious traffic is blocked early in the rule evaluation process
The policy applies consistently across all firewalls in the device group
Security Pre-Rules are ideal for centralized enforcement of critical policies like threat blocking, geo-IP restrictions, or known bad IPs/domains.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Security Post-Rules These are evaluated after local firewall rules. Placing block rules here risks them being overridden or missed entirely.
C. Local firewall Security rules These are evaluated after Pre-Rules. In Panorama deployments, centralized control is preferred for consistency and auditability.
D. Default Rules These are implicit rules at the bottom of the rulebase (e.g., deny all). You cannot place custom block rules here, nor do they offer high priority.

🔗 Valid References:
Ace4Sure PCNSE Question Explanation
Exam4Training PCNSE Practice
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Security Policy Rulebase Evaluation Order




Question # 7

An administrator configures HA on a customer's Palo Alto Networks firewalls with path monitoring by using the default configuration values. What are the default values for ping interval and ping count before a failover is triggered?
A. Ping interval of 200 ms and ping count of three failed pings
B. Ping interval of 5000 ms and ping count of 10 failed pings
C. Ping interval of 200 ms and ping count of 10 failed pings
D. Ping interval of 5000 ms and ping count of three failed pings


C. Ping interval of 200 ms and ping count of 10 failed pings
Explanation:
In Palo Alto Networks High Availability (HA) configuration, path monitoring is used to detect link or path failures by sending periodic pings to a monitored IP address. If the pings fail consistently, a failover is triggered.

The default values for path monitoring are:
Ping Interval: 200 milliseconds
Ping Count: 10 consecutive failed pings
This means the firewall will wait for 10 failed pings, each spaced 200 ms apart, before initiating a failover.
📚 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks – Configure HA Path Monitoring

❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong:
A. Incorrect ping count (only 3)
B. & D. Incorrect ping interval (5000 ms is not default)



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.