Question # 1
How can a firewall engineer bypass App-ID and content inspection features on a Palo Alto
Networks firewall when troubleshooting? A. Create a custom application, define its properties and signatures, and ensure all
scanning options in the "Advanced" tab are uncheckedB. Create a custom application, define its properties, then create an application override
and reference the custom applicationC. Create a new security rule specifically for the affected traffic, but do not reference any
Security Profiles inside the ruleD. Create a new security rule specifically for the affected traffic, and select "Disable Server
Response Inspection"
Reveal Answer
B. Create a custom application, define its properties, then create an application override
and reference the custom application
Explanation:
When troubleshooting, sometimes you need to bypass App-ID and content inspection so that traffic is forwarded purely based on port/protocol without being altered or blocked by application signatures or content scanning.
The supported method in Palo Alto Networks firewalls is to use an Application Override Policy:
Create a custom application that represents the traffic (e.g., based on port and protocol).
Apply an Application Override Policy to match the specific traffic and map it to the custom app.
This tells the firewall to skip App-ID and content inspection for that traffic, allowing raw forwarding for troubleshooting.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Create a custom application … ensure scanning options unchecked
Custom applications alone don’t bypass App-ID processing or content inspection. You still need the App Override policy for that.
C. Create a new security rule without Security Profiles
This only skips threat/content profiles (like AV, Anti-Spyware, URL filtering), but App-ID inspection still happens. Doesn’t fully bypass inspection.
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D. Create a new security rule and disable Server Response Inspection
This only skips Server Response Inspection (SRI) for HTTP responses, not full App-ID or content inspection. Very limited.
📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Docs – Application Override:
“An Application Override policy allows you to bypass App-ID and Content-ID inspection for specified traffic. The firewall assigns the traffic to a custom application and forwards it without further inspection.”
Question # 2
An administrator is receiving complaints about application performance degradation. After
checking the ACC, the administrator observes that there is an excessive amount of VoIP
traffic.
Which three elements should the administrator configure to address this issue? (Choose
three.) A. An Application Override policy for the SIP traffic
B. QoS on the egress interface for the traffic flows
C. QoS on the ingress interface for the traffic flows
D. A QoS profile defining traffic classes
E. A QoS policy for each application ID
Reveal Answer
B. QoS on the egress interface for the traffic flows
D. A QoS profile defining traffic classes
E. A QoS policy for each application ID
Explanation:
In this scenario, the administrator observes excessive VoIP traffic degrading application performance. To solve this, Quality of Service (QoS) must be implemented properly on the Palo Alto Networks firewall.
Correct Options
B. QoS on the egress interface for the traffic flows
Palo Alto firewalls apply QoS only on the egress interface. This ensures traffic shaping and bandwidth enforcement happen before traffic leaves the firewall.
Without QoS on the egress interface, bandwidth policies cannot take effect.
Reference: “QoS is enforced only on egress interfaces to limit or guarantee bandwidth for traffic classes.”
D. A QoS profile defining traffic classes
A QoS profile defines how traffic is divided into up to 8 classes.
Each class can specify maximum and guaranteed bandwidth, along with priority levels (real-time, high, medium, low).
Defining a profile is mandatory before applying QoS policies.
Reference: “The QoS profile specifies the maximum and guaranteed bandwidth for traffic classes that QoS policies reference.”
E. A QoS policy for each application ID
QoS policies classify traffic into the classes defined in the QoS profile.
Policies can match by App-ID, users, zones, or addresses.
This enables assigning VoIP to a high-priority class while limiting its maximum bandwidth to protect other applications.
Reference: “QoS policies classify traffic into classes based on App-ID, users, or addresses.”
Question # 3
Which two scripting file types require direct upload to the Advanced WildFire portal/API for
analysis? (Choose two.) A. Ps1B. PerlC. PythonD. VBS
Reveal Answer
A. Ps1D. VBS
Explanation:
Why These File Types?
PowerShell (.ps1) and VBScript (.vbs) are scripting languages commonly used in malware.
The Advanced WildFire portal/API requires direct upload for these because:
They are not executable binaries (e.g., .exe, .dll) that can be analyzed via standard WildFire submission (e.g., email, URL).
They require specialized sandboxing to simulate execution and detect malicious behavior.
Why Not Others?
Perl (.pl) and Python (.py) can also be analyzed, but they are less commonly targeted for direct upload requirements in this context. However, the question specifies "require direct upload," and PowerShell and VBScript are the most critical due to their prevalence in attacks.
Reference:
Palo Alto WildFire Admin Guide:
"Script files (e.g., .ps1, .vbs) must be uploaded directly to the Advanced WildFire portal for analysis."
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Question # 4
Which two actions must an engineer take to configure SSL Forward Proxy decryption?
(Choose two.) A. Configure the decryption profileB. Define a Forward Trust CertificateC. Configure SSL decryption rulesD. Configure a SSL/TLS service profile
Reveal Answer
B. Define a Forward Trust CertificateC. Configure SSL decryption rules
Explanation:
To deploy SSL Forward Proxy decryption, an engineer must perform a series of steps. The two most fundamental are:
Define a Forward Trust Certificate (B): The firewall must act as a trusted intermediary. To do this, it needs to have a Forward Trust Certificate, which is a Certificate Authority (CA) certificate that is trusted by the clients on the network. The firewall will use this certificate to sign the new, dynamically generated certificates it presents to the clients during the decryption process. Without this trusted CA, clients will receive certificate errors.
Configure SSL decryption rules (C): After the certificate is in place, the engineer must create a decryption rule. This rule specifies which traffic to decrypt (e.g., all traffic, specific applications, specific URLs). The action of the rule is set to Decrypt, which tells the firewall to perform a man-in-the-middle decryption on the matching traffic.
The other options are important but are secondary to these two core actions:
A. Configure the decryption profile: A decryption profile is an object that defines the details of the decryption process (e.g., protocols, ciphers, handling of untrusted certificates). It is an essential part of a best-practice decryption policy, but the policy itself (the rule) must be configured to use it.
D. Configure a SSL/TLS service profile: This profile is used to secure the firewall's own management services, not to decrypt traffic passing through the firewall.
Question # 5
An engineer needs to collect User-ID mappings from the company's existing proxies.
What two methods can be used to pull this data from third party proxies? (Choose two.) A. Client probingB. SyslogC. XFF HeadersD. Server Monitoring
Reveal Answer
B. SyslogC. XFF Headers
Explanation:
This question tests your knowledge of how the Palo Alto Networks firewall integrates with third-party systems to gather User-ID information, specifically when a proxy server is involved in the traffic path.
The Core Concept: User-ID from Proxies
In a network where all user traffic flows through a proxy server, the firewall often only sees the proxy's IP address as the source of traffic. To apply user-based policies, the firewall needs to learn which user is behind the proxy's IP address at any given time. The firewall has specific methods to extract this user-to-IP mapping information from proxy servers.
Analyzing the Correct Options:
Why Option B (Syslog) is Correct:
This is the most common and reliable method for integrating with third-party proxies.
How it works: The proxy server is configured to send its audit or access logs to the Palo Alto Networks firewall via syslog (typically on UDP port 514). These logs contain entries that tie a username to an internal IP address.
The firewall's User-ID agent includes a Syslog Parser. You configure this parser with a specific regular expression to "teach" the firewall how to read the proxy's log format and extract the key fields: timestamp, username, and IP address.
Example: A syslog entry from a proxy might look like:
2023-10-27 10:15:30 user=jdoe src=192.168.1.100 url=example.com
The regex would be built to capture jdoe as the user and 192.168.1.100 as the IP.
Once parsed, the firewall adds this mapping to its User-IP mapping table and can apply policies based on the user jdoe.
Why Option C (XFF Headers) is Correct:
1.X-Forwarded-For (XFF) is a standard HTTP header used by proxies, load balancers, and other intermediaries to identify the originating IP address of a client connecting to a web server.
2.How it works: When the proxy forwards an HTTP/HTTPS request to the destination server, it adds an X-Forwarded-For: header containing the original client's IP address.
The Palo Alto Networks firewall can be configured to monitor this header. In the User-ID configuration (Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Monitor HTTP Headers), you can enable monitoring for the X-Forwarded-For header.
When the firewall sees traffic from the proxy's IP address and detects an X-Forwarded-For header with an IP inside it, it can map that internal IP to the user. This mapping is often combined with another method (like captive portal or client probing) to finally get the username for that IP.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
Why Option A (Client Probing) is Incorrect:
1.Client Probing (or WMI probing) is a method where the firewall directly queries Windows hosts (via WMI) or UNIX hosts (via SSH) to ask "which user is logged in?"
This method bypasses the proxy. It queries the endpoint directly on the network. It does not "pull data from" the proxy itself. The question specifically asks for methods to get data from the third-party proxies.
Why Option D (Server Monitoring) is Incorrect:
1.Server Monitoring is a method where the firewall monitors authentication logs directly from servers (e.g., Windows Event Logs from a Domain Controller via WMI or syslog from a RADIUS server).
2.Similar to client probing, this method gets data from the authentication source or the endpoint, not from the proxy server. The proxy is not involved in this data collection method.
Reference and Key Concepts for the PCNSE Exam:
1.Primary Use Case: The classic scenario for using these methods is when the firewall is deployed in front of a proxy server (e.g., a forward proxy in a DMZ). All internal users egress through this proxy, so the firewall only sees the proxy's IP. To apply user-based policies, it must learn the mappings from the proxy.
2.GUI Path for Syslog Parsing: Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Add Syslog Parsing Rule
3.GUI Path for HTTP Header Monitoring: Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Monitor HTTP Headers
4.Combination of Methods: Often, you use both methods together. The firewall uses the XFF header to learn the internal IP address of the user behind the proxy. It then uses another method (like client probing or server monitoring) to map that internal IP address to a specific username.
5Key Differentiator: Remember, if the question is about getting data from the proxy itself, the answers will always revolve around syslog and HTTP headers.
Question # 6
In the New App Viewer under Policy Optimizer, what does the compare option for a specific
rule allow an administrator to compare? A. The running configuration with the candidate configuration of the firewallB. Applications configured in the rule with applications seen from traffic matching the same
ruleC. Applications configured in the rule with their dependenciesD. The security rule with any other security rule selected
Reveal Answer
B. Applications configured in the rule with applications seen from traffic matching the same
rule
Explanation:
In the New App Viewer under Policy Optimizer, the Compare option allows administrators to evaluate how well a Security policy rule aligns with actual traffic. Specifically, it compares:
The applications explicitly configured in the rule vs.
The applications observed in traffic that matched the rule
This helps identify gaps where the rule may be too broad (e.g., allowing ssl or web-browsing) and is implicitly permitting other applications that should be explicitly defined. It’s a key feature for tightening policy and improving visibility.
This behavior is confirmed in Palo Alto’s New App Viewer documentation and PCNSE study guides.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Running vs. candidate config: That comparison is done in the commit preview—not in Policy Optimizer.
C. Applications vs. dependencies: Dependencies are shown during App-ID selection, but not in the Compare function.
D. Rule vs. another rule: Policy Optimizer doesn’t compare rules to each other—it compares configured apps to observed apps within the same rule.
Question # 7
An engineer is deploying multiple firewalls with common configuration in Panorama.
What are two benefits of using nested device groups? (Choose two.) A. Inherit settings from the Shared groupB. Inherit IPSec crypto profilesC. Inherit all Security policy rules and objectsD. Inherit parent Security policy rules and objects
Reveal Answer
A. Inherit settings from the Shared groupD. Inherit parent Security policy rules and objects
Explanation:
The scenario involves an engineer deploying multiple firewalls with a common configuration using Panorama, and the question asks for two benefits of using nested device groups. Nested device groups in Panorama allow for a hierarchical structure where settings and policies can be inherited from parent groups, providing flexibility and centralized management. Let’s evaluate the options to determine the correct benefits.
Why A. Inherit settings from the Shared group?
Purpose: In Panorama, the Shared group is a top-level container that holds configurations (e.g., network settings, templates, and objects) applicable to all device groups unless overridden. Nested device groups can inherit these settings, allowing the engineer to define common configurations (e.g., DNS, NTP, or interface settings) at the Shared level and apply them to all firewalls, reducing redundancy.
Benefit: This enables consistent baseline configurations across all firewalls while allowing nested groups to customize specific settings as needed. It simplifies management by centralizing common settings.
Reference: Palo Alto Networks documentation states, "Nested device groups can inherit settings from the Shared group, providing a foundation for common configurations."
Why D. Inherit parent Security policy rules and objects?
Purpose: Nested device groups inherit Security policy rules and objects (e.g., addresses, services, applications) from their parent device groups. This hierarchical inheritance allows the engineer to define broad policies at a higher-level parent group (e.g., allowing HTTP traffic) and refine or add specific rules in lower-level nested groups (e.g., restricting HTTP to certain users), tailoring policies to specific firewall subsets.
Benefit: It promotes reusability and consistency across firewalls while enabling granular control. Changes at the parent level automatically propagate to nested groups unless overridden, streamlining policy management.
Reference: Palo Alto Networks documentation notes, "Nested device groups inherit Security policy rules and objects from parent groups, allowing for layered policy design."
Why Not the Other Options?
B. Inherit IPSec crypto profiles:
Explanation: IPSec crypto profiles (e.g., encryption algorithms, authentication methods) are configured within network templates or template stacks, not device groups. Device groups handle policies (e.g., Security, NAT), while templates manage network and device settings (e.g., IPSec profiles). Nested device groups do not inherit IPSec crypto profiles directly; these are inherited via template stacks.
Why Incorrect: This is a template-level setting, not a device group benefit.
C. Inherit all Security policy rules and objects:
Explanation: This option suggests inheritance from all levels (e.g., Shared and all parent groups), but nested device groups inherit only from their immediate parent group in the hierarchy, not all groups. They can also inherit from the Shared group independently. The inheritance is selective and hierarchical, not a blanket inheritance of all rules and objects.
Why Incorrect: This overstates the scope of inheritance; it’s limited to the parent group’s rules and objects.
Additional Context:
Nested Device Groups: These are organized in a parent-child hierarchy within Panorama. For example, a parent group might contain baseline Security rules, while a child group adds specific exceptions. The Shared group provides a global baseline.
Configuration Steps:
Navigate to Panorama > Device Groups.
Create a parent device group (e.g., "Global-Policies") and a nested group (e.g., "Regional-Policies").
Define common settings/rules in the Shared group and parent group, then refine in the nested group.
Push the configuration to the firewalls.
Best Practices:
Use nested groups to reflect organizational structure (e.g., regions, departments).
Minimize overrides to maintain consistency.
Test policy inheritance with Panorama > Preview Changes.
PCNSE Exam Relevance: This question tests your understanding of Panorama’s device group hierarchy and inheritance, a key topic in the PCNSE exam. It requires knowledge of how nested groups enhance configuration management.
Conclusion:
Two benefits of using nested device groups are that they inherit settings from the Shared group (providing a common baseline) and inherit parent Security policy rules and objects (enabling layered policy design), improving efficiency and consistency across multiple firewalls.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: Panorama Device Groups and Inheritance
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: Nested Device Group Configuration
ExamTopics PCNSE Discussion: Panorama Nested Groups
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.