Question # 1
A firewall administrator manages sets of firewalls which have two unique idle timeout
values. Datacenter firewalls needs to be set to 20 minutes and BranchOffice firewalls need
to be set to 30 minutes. How can the administrator assign these settings through the use of
template stacks? A. Create one template stack and place the BranchOffice_Template in higher priority than
Datacenter_Template.B. Create one template stack and place the Datanceter_Template in higher priority than
BranchOffice_template.C. Create two separate template stacks one each for Datacenter and BranchOffice, and
verify that Datacenter_Template and BranchOffice_template are at the bottom of their
stack.D. Create two separate template stacks one each for Datacenter and BranchOffice, and
verify that Datacenter_template are at the top of their stack.
Reveal Answer
D. Create two separate template stacks one each for Datacenter and BranchOffice, and
verify that Datacenter_template are at the top of their stack.
Explanation:
In Panorama, template stacks allow layering of multiple templates, with higher-priority templates overriding lower ones. The order matters: templates at the top of the stack take precedence when there are conflicting settings.
To assign different idle timeout values for Datacenter and BranchOffice firewalls:
Create two separate template stacks:
One for Datacenter firewalls
One for BranchOffice firewalls
In each stack, place the corresponding template (Datacenter_Template or BranchOffice_Template) at the top. This ensures that its settings—like idle timeout—override any shared or base template values beneath it.
This approach allows centralized management while preserving site-specific configurations.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A & B: Using a single stack with both templates risks unintended overrides. You can’t cleanly isolate settings for two distinct firewall groups this way.
C: Placing the site-specific templates at the bottom of the stack means their settings can be overridden by higher templates—defeating the purpose.
🔗 Reference:
You can find this behavior documented in Palo Alto’s Templates and Template Stacks guide
Question # 2
Where can a service route be configured for a specific destination IP? A. Use Netw ork > Virtual Routers, select the Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4B. Use Device > Setup > Services > ServicesC. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize >
DestinationD. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > IPv4
Reveal Answer
C. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize >
Destination
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks firewall, a service route determines the interface and gateway used for specific firewall services (e.g., DNS, NTP, Palo Alto Networks updates) to reach external servers. By default, the firewall uses the management interface for these services, but you can configure service routes to use specific interfaces or gateways for particular destination IP addresses. The Service Route Configuration allows customization of these routes, including specifying a Destination IP address for targeted routing. Below is a concise explanation of why option C is correct, why the others are incorrect, and relevant details for the PCNSE exam, adhering to a 500-word limit.
Correct Answer
C. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > Destination:
Service routes are configured under Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration. In the Customize tab, you can select a service (e.g., DNS, WildFire, URL Updates) and specify a Destination IP address, along with the source interface and gateway to use for reaching that IP. This allows the firewall to route traffic for a specific service to a particular destination IP through a defined interface, bypassing the default management interface or routing table.
Example: Configure a service route for DNS to use ethernet1/1 to reach a specific DNS server IP (e.g., 8.8.8.8).
Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Use Network > Virtual Routers, select the Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4:
The Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4 section is used to configure static routes for general network traffic in the data plane, not for firewall services like DNS or updates. Service routes are specific to management plane traffic and are configured separately, making this option incorrect.
B. Use Device > Setup > Services > Services:
The Device > Setup > Services section configures global settings for services like DNS or NTP (e.g., server IPs), but it does not allow specifying service routes or destination IPs. Service routes are managed under Service Route Configuration, not the Services tab, so this option is incorrect.
D. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > IPv4:
In Service Route Configuration > Customize, there is no IPv4 tab. Instead, the Destination tab allows specifying IP addresses for service routes. The configuration is protocol-agnostic (IPv4 or IPv6 is determined by the destination IP), making “IPv4” an incorrect reference.
Technical Details
Configuration:
Navigate to Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize.
Select a service (e.g., DNS), click Destination, add the destination IP (e.g., 8.8.8.8), and specify the source interface (e.g., ethernet1/1) and gateway.
Commit the configuration.
CLI: set deviceconfig system route service destination source interface gateway .
Use Case: Direct specific service traffic (e.g., WildFire updates to a particular server IP) through a non-management interface for security or routing purposes.
Monitoring: Verify service route usage via Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration or CLI (show route service).
Best Practice: Use service routes to isolate management traffic or route to specific servers in complex network environments.
PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your ability to configure service routes for firewall management traffic, particularly for specific destination IPs, ensuring proper routing for critical services.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (PAN-OS Admin Guide): Details service route configuration for specific destination IPs under Service Route Configuration > Customize > Destination.
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base (Article ID: 000062345): Clarifies service routes versus virtual router static routes.
Question # 3
Which interface type should a firewall administrator configure as an upstream to the ingress
trusted interface when configuring transparent web proxy on a Palo Alto Networks firewall? A. TunnelB. EthernetC. VLAND. Lookback
Reveal Answer
C. VLAN
Explanation:
Configuring a transparent web proxy on a Palo Alto Networks firewall involves redirecting web traffic to an explicit proxy (like PAN-OS's built-in proxy) without the client's knowledge. The key to this setup is understanding the flow of traffic and the required interface roles.
1. Understanding Transparent Proxy Flow
In a typical transparent proxy deployment:
A client sends HTTP/S traffic to a destination web server.
A firewall rule redirects this traffic to the firewall's own proxy engine.
The proxy engine terminates the client connection, processes the request (including performing decryption, threat scanning, and URL filtering), and then initiates a new connection to the destination web server on behalf of the client.
For this new connection to the internet, the proxy needs an egress point.
2. The Role of the "Upstream" Interface
The upstream interface is the logical interface on the firewall that the proxy uses as the source interface for its new, outbound connection to the destination web server. It is the "egress" point for the proxy-originated traffic.
The proxy needs a source IP address for its connections. This IP is assigned to the upstream interface.
This upstream interface must be a Layer 3 interface with a valid IP address that can route to the internet.
3. Why VLAN is the Correct Choice
A VLAN interface is a Layer 3 virtual interface. It has an IP address and resides in a zone and a virtual router. This makes it perfectly suited to act as the upstream interface because:
It provides the necessary Layer 3 properties (IP address, routing).
It allows for logical separation of the proxy's management traffic from other data plane traffic.
It is a common and best practice to use a dedicated VLAN interface for this purpose.
4. Why the Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Tunnel
Incorrect. A tunnel interface (e.g., for IPsec or GRE) is used for encrypted VPN tunnels. It is not used as a general-purpose upstream interface for proxy traffic. The proxy's traffic to the web server should be routed normally, not through a specific tunnel, unless a very specific use case demands it.
B. Ethernet
Incorrect. A physical Ethernet interface can operate in two modes:
Layer 2 (Virtual Wire or Layer2): It has no IP address and cannot be used for routing, so it cannot be an upstream interface.
Layer 3: While a Layer 3 Ethernet interface could technically be used, it is not the best practice. You would be dedicating an entire physical port just for the proxy's upstream traffic. Using a VLAN sub-interface on a physical trunk port is a much more flexible and common approach.
D. Loopback
Incorrect. A loopback interface is a logical, always-up interface used for management purposes or for protocols that need a stable endpoint (like BGP router ID). While it has an IP address, it is not a routed interface in the sense of having a physical path out of the firewall. Traffic sourced from a loopback interface would likely be dropped because it lacks a clear egress path, making it unsuitable as an upstream interface for proxy traffic.
Reference and Key Concepts for the PCNSE Exam:
1.GUI Path: The upstream interface is configured within the explicit proxy settings.
Device > Server Profiles > HTTP/HTTPS Proxy > Edit your profile.
In the Transparent section, you will find the Upstream Interface dropdown. This is where you select your pre-configured VLAN interface.
2.Prerequisite: Before selecting it in the proxy profile, the VLAN interface must be created (Network > Interfaces > VLAN), assigned an IP address, placed in a zone, and added to the appropriate virtual router.
3.Traffic Flow: Remember the path: Client -> (Ingress Trusted Interface) -> Firewall Proxy -> (Upstream VLAN Interface) -> Internet -> Web Server.
4.Best Practice: Using a dedicated VLAN interface for the upstream role is the standard and recommended method, as it provides clear separation and simplifies troubleshooting.
Question # 4
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.
Reveal Answer
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 # 5
Information Security is enforcing group-based policies by using security-event monitoring
on Windows User-ID agents for IP-to-User mapping in the network. During the rollout,
Information Security identified a gap for users authenticating to their VPN and wireless
networks.
Root cause analysis showed that users were authenticating via RADIUS and that
authentication events were not captured on the domain controllers that were being
monitored Information Security found that authentication events existed on the Identity
Management solution (IDM). There did not appear to be direct integration between PANOS
and the IDM solution.
How can Information Security extract and learn iP-to-user mapping information from
authentication events for VPN and wireless users? A. Add domain controllers that might be missing to perform security-event monitoring for
VPN and wireless users.B. Configure the integrated User-ID agent on PAN-OS to accept Syslog messages over
TLS.C. Configure the User-ID XML API on PAN-OS firewalls to pull the authentication events
directly from the IDM solutionD. Configure the Windows User-ID agents to monitor the VPN concentrators and wireless
controllers for IP-to-User mapping.
Reveal Answer
B. Configure the integrated User-ID agent on PAN-OS to accept Syslog messages over
TLS.
Explanation:
1: Problem restated
Goal: Enforce group-based policies (needs accurate IP-to-User mapping).
Current setup: Using Windows User-ID agent monitoring domain controller security logs.
Gap: VPN + Wireless logins are via RADIUS → auth events not on DCs, but instead on the Identity Management (IDM) solution.
IDM does not have a direct PAN-OS integration.
So, how do we get User-ID mappings from IDM into PAN-OS?
2: Methods for IP-to-User Mapping
PAN-OS supports multiple methods:
Windows security event logs (via User-ID agent).
Syslog parsing from external auth sources (RADIUS, NAC, wireless controllers, VPN concentrators, IDM, etc.).
XML API (push mappings into PAN-OS).
Captive Portal / GlobalProtect.
👉 In this case: IDM generates syslog auth events → The right approach is to configure Syslog Listener in PAN-OS User-ID agent to accept those syslog messages.
3: Analyze the Options
A. Add domain controllers that might be missing to perform security-event monitoring for VPN and wireless users.
❌ Wrong. Auth events are not on DCs at all (root cause already confirmed).
B. Configure the integrated User-ID agent on PAN-OS to accept Syslog messages over TLS.
✅ Correct. PAN-OS User-ID agent (built-in or external) can parse syslog messages from IDM, extract username ↔ IP, and populate User-ID mappings. This solves the issue directly.
C. Configure the User-ID XML API on PAN-OS firewalls to pull the authentication events directly from the IDM solution.
❌ Wrong direction. PAN-OS does not “pull” from IDM via XML API — instead, third-party systems push mappings via XML API.
D. Configure the Windows User-ID agents to monitor the VPN concentrators and wireless controllers for IP-to-User mapping.
❌ Not possible in this case. Those devices authenticate through IDM, not directly exposing logs. Windows User-ID agents can’t just “monitor” VPN controllers unless they emit Windows events (which they don’t).
🔹 Key Takeaways for PCNSE
If auth logs don’t hit the DCs, use Syslog integration to feed mappings.
PAN-OS can parse syslog login events from IDM, RADIUS servers, wireless controllers, NAC, etc.
XML API is push-only — third-party system pushes mappings to PAN-OS, not PAN-OS pulling.
📖 Reference:
Configure User Mapping Using Syslog Senders
“A firewall or User-ID agent can monitor syslog messages from authentication systems to learn IP-to-username mappings.”
Question # 6
An engineer has been given approval to upgrade their environment to the latest version of
PAN-OS.
The environment consists of both physical and virtual firewalls, a virtual Panorama, and
virtual log collectors.
What is the recommended order of operational steps when upgrading? A. Upgrade the log collectors, upgrade the firewalls, upgrade Panorama
B. Upgrade the firewalls, upgrade log collectors, upgrade Panorama
C. Upgrade Panorama, upgrade the log collectors, upgrade the firewalls
D. Upgrade the firewalls, upgrade Panorama, upgrade the log collectors
Reveal Answer
C. Upgrade Panorama, upgrade the log collectors, upgrade the firewalls
Explanation:
Reasoning
When upgrading a mixed environment (Panorama, log collectors, firewalls), Palo Alto has strict guidance:
1.Upgrade Panorama first
Panorama must always be at equal or higher version than managed firewalls and log collectors, otherwise it can’t manage them.
First upgrade Panorama to the target base version (but don’t push configs yet).
2.Upgrade the Log Collectors
Since log collectors are managed via Panorama, they must also be upgraded before firewalls, so logging remains compatible.
3.Upgrade the Firewalls
Finally, upgrade managed NGFWs (physical + virtual).
This ensures compatibility across management and logging planes.
Reference:
Palo Alto Docs: Upgrade Sequence for PAN-OS (Panorama > Log Collectors > Firewalls)
Palo Alto Networks – Upgrade Best Practices
Question # 7
Which two items must be configured when implementing application override and allowing
traffic through the firewall? (Choose two.) A. Application filterB. Application override policy ruleC. Security policy ruleD. Custom app
Reveal Answer
B. Application override policy ruleC. Security policy rule
Explanation:
Application Override allows administrators to force the firewall to treat traffic as a specific application, bypassing App-ID if necessary. This is useful when:
The firewall misidentifies an application.
An application uses non-standard ports.
Why These Answers Are Correct:
B. Application Override Policy Rule
Defines which traffic should be reclassified as a different application.
Requires:
Original application (e.g., ssl)
Override application (e.g., facebook-base)
Source/destination criteria.
C. Security Policy Rule
Must allow the traffic (either the original or overridden application).
Without a security rule permitting the traffic, it will still be blocked.
Why the Others Are Incorrect:
A. Application Filter → Used for monitoring/reporting, not overriding.
D. Custom App → Not required unless you’re creating a new application (not overriding an existing one).
Reference:
Palo Alto Application Override Docs
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.