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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.


Why Choose Us?


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.
2. Detailed Feedback: Get clear explanations for every Palo Alto certified network security engineer exam question to deepen your knowledge and learn from mistakes.
3. Track Your Progress: Monitor your performance over time and focus on areas that need improvement.
4. Flexible Practice: Study anytime, anywhere, and at your own pace with our user-friendly platform.


Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

Refer to Exhibit:
A. Option A
B. Option B
C. Option C
D. Option D


D. Option D
Explanation:

Scenario Recap
Panorama is being used to manage policies and templates.
The administrator is creating a policy, but the zone dropdown does not include the required zone.
This usually means Panorama does not have zone information available — and that happens when a firewall is not properly linked to both the device group (policies) and the template (zones/interfaces).

Breakdown
Diagram & Panorama Settings
Shows Panorama managing multiple firewalls.
Timeout and commit synchronization settings.
Security Policy Rule
When creating rules, zone selection should appear.
But the required zone is not listed → root issue.
Objects / Zones Configuration
Shows configured security zones.
These zones must come from a firewall that belongs to both device group + template.
Panorama Settings – Share Options
Shows “Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices” setting.
This only impacts unused objects sync, not zone availability.

✅ Correct Answer
The missing zones issue is because no firewall is yet added to both the device group and template.

👉 The correct choice is:
D. Add a firewall to both the device group and the template

❌ Why not the others?
A. Specify master device
→ helps Panorama know which device’s zones/VRs to use if multiple firewalls exist, but if the firewall isn’t in both DG + template, it won’t even show.
B. Share unused objects
→ unrelated to zones.
C. Reference template
→ allows object reference from another template, but still requires a firewall in both DG + template.




Question # 2

Exhibit.

Given the screenshot, how did the firewall handle the traffic?
A. Traffic was allowed by profile but denied by policy as a threat.
B. Traffic was allowed by policy but denied by profile as a threat.
C. Traffic was allowed by policy but denied by profile as encrypted.
D. Traffic was allowed by policy but denied by profile as a nonstandard port.


B. Traffic was allowed by policy but denied by profile as a threat.
Explanation:

Key Evidence from the Log:
1.Action: allow (from policy) and Session End Reason: threat
The traffic was allowed by the Security policy (rule non-standard-ports).
However, it was blocked by a Security profile (e.g., Antivirus, Anti-Spyware) because it was classified as a threat.
2.Threat Indicators:
Category: proxy-avoidance-and-anonymizers (suspicious).
Application: ssl on non-standard port 9002 (often used for tunneling).
App Subcategory: encrypted-tunnel (potential bypass attempt).
3.Profile Override:
Security profiles can override policy allows if threats are detected (e.g., block malicious content).

Why Not Other Options?
A.Policies don’t deny traffic after allowing it; profiles do.
C.Encryption alone doesn’t cause denies—threats do.
D.Non-standard ports are allowed by the policy (rule name confirms).

Reference:
Palo Alto Security Profiles Documentation:
"Security profiles can block sessions allowed by policies if threats are detected."




Question # 3

A company wants to implement threat prevention to take action without redesigning the network routing. What are two best practice deployment modes for the firewall? (Choose two.)
A. TAP
B. Layer 2
C. Layer 3
D. Virtual Wire


B. Layer 2
D. Virtual Wire
Explanation:
When a company wants to deploy threat prevention without altering its existing routing or IP addressing, the firewall must be inserted transparently. Two deployment modes support this:

Layer 2 Mode:
The firewall acts like a switch, forwarding traffic based on MAC addresses. It inspects packets and enforces security policies without requiring changes to IP routing. This mode is ideal for inline deployments where VLANs are already in use. ✅ Transparent, no routing changes required
Virtual Wire Mode:
The firewall is placed between two Layer 2 devices and forwards traffic without any IP or MAC address awareness. It’s completely transparent and doesn’t participate in routing or switching. This mode is perfect for drop-in threat prevention, especially in flat networks or where minimal disruption is critical. ✅ Fully transparent, no IP or routing changes
These modes are recommended in Palo Alto’s deployment best practices for threat prevention without redesigning the network.

❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. TAP Mode:
TAP mode allows passive monitoring only. The firewall can inspect traffic but cannot take action—no blocking, no enforcement. It’s useful for visibility but not for prevention.
C. Layer 3 Mode:
Requires the firewall to participate in routing. This mode does require network redesign, including IP address changes and route updates. Not suitable when the goal is zero disruption.

Reference
Deployment Modes Overview – Palo Alto Networks
Virtual Wire Interface Configuration
Layer 2 Interface Configuration




Question # 4

A network administrator is trying to prevent domain username and password submissions to phishing sites on some allowed URL categories Which set of steps does the administrator need to take in the URL Filtering profile to prevent credential phishing on the firewall?
A. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block Select the User credential Detection tab and select Use Domain Credential Filter Commit
B. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block Select the User credential Detection tab and select use IP User Mapping Commit
C. Choose the URL categories on Site Access column and set action to block Click the User credential Detection tab and select IP User Mapping Commit
D. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block Select the URL filtering settings and enable Domain Credential Filter Commit


A. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block Select the User credential Detection tab and select Use Domain Credential Filter Commit
Explanation:
A network administrator aims to prevent domain username and password submissions to phishing sites within allowed URL categories on a Palo Alto Networks firewall. The URL Filtering profile, configured under Objects > Security Profiles > URL Filtering, includes features to detect and block credential submissions to untrusted or phishing sites. The User Credential Submission column allows the administrator to select specific URL categories (e.g., "Phishing," "Malware") and set the action to "block" to prevent credential entry on those sites. The User Credential Detection tab enables the firewall to identify domain credentials using the Domain Credential Filter, which integrates with User-ID to monitor and block submissions of Active Directory credentials to unauthorized sites. This combination ensures protection while allowing legitimate traffic.

Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block, Select the User credential Detection tab and select use IP User Mapping, Commit: This is incorrect because IP User Mapping maps users to IPs but does not specifically detect or filter domain credentials. The Domain Credential Filter is required for credential-specific protection. The PCNSE Study Guide clarifies the distinction.
C. Choose the URL categories on Site Access column and set action to block, Click the User credential Detection tab and select IP User Mapping, Commit: This is incorrect because the Site Access column controls general access (allow/deny) to URL categories, not credential submission specifically. IP User Mapping is irrelevant here, and the correct column is User Credential Submission. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide specifies the correct column.
D. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block, Select the URL filtering settings and enable Domain Credential Filter, Commit: This is incorrect because there is no URL Filtering Settings tab to enable the Domain Credential Filter; it is configured under the User Credential Detection tab. The PCNSE Study Guide confirms the correct tab.

Practical Steps:
Navigate to Objects > Security Profiles > URL Filtering.
Create or edit a URL Filtering profile.
In the User Credential Submission column, select the relevant URL categories (e.g., "Phishing") and set the action to "block".
Go to the User Credential Detection tab, check Use Domain Credential Filter.
Ensure User-ID is configured with an Active Directory connection under Device > User
Identification.
Attach the profile to a Security policy under Policies > Security.
Commit the configuration.
Verify via Monitor > Threat Logs that credential submissions are blocked.

References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details URL Filtering for credential protection.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains credential submission settings.




Question # 5

How is Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) enabled when troubleshooting a VPN Phase 2 mismatch?
A. Enable PFS under the IKE Gateway advanced options
B. Enable PFS under the IPsec Tunnel advanced options
C. Select the appropriate DH Group under the IPsec Crypto profile
D. Add an authentication algorithm in the IPsec Crypto profile


C. Select the appropriate DH Group under the IPsec Crypto profile
Explanation:
Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) ensures that a new Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange is performed for every Phase 2 (IPsec SA) negotiation. This guarantees that if one key is compromised, it cannot be used to decrypt past or future sessions.
PFS is not configured under IKE Gateway (Phase 1) → that’s for IKE SA negotiation.
PFS is part of IPsec Phase 2 negotiation and is enabled in the IPsec Crypto Profile by selecting a DH Group (e.g., Group 2, Group 5, Group 14, etc.).

✅ Correct:
C. Select the appropriate DH Group under the IPsec Crypto profile
This explicitly enables Perfect Forward Secrecy for Phase 2 negotiations.

❌ Incorrect:
A. Enable PFS under the IKE Gateway advanced options
PFS is not configured in Phase 1 (IKE Gateway).
B. Enable PFS under the IPsec Tunnel advanced options
There’s no direct toggle here; it references the Crypto Profile instead.
D. Add an authentication algorithm in the IPsec Crypto profile
Authentication (e.g., SHA256, SHA512) is different from PFS and does not enable it.

📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Docs – Configure an IPsec Crypto Profile
“To enable Perfect Forward Secrecy, select a Diffie-Hellman group in the IPsec Crypto Profile.”




Question # 6

What type of address object would be useful for internal devices where the addressing structure assigns meaning to certain bits in the address, as illustrated in the diagram?
A. IP Netmask
B. IP Wildcard Mask
C. IP Address
D. IP Range


B. IP Wildcard Mask
Explanation:

Why Wildcard Mask?
1.Address Structure with Meaningful Bits:
The diagram shows an IP address (10.132.1.156) where certain bits represent specific attributes (e.g., organization, region, device type).
To create an address object that matches devices based on these meaningful bits (ignoring others), a wildcard mask is ideal.
2.Wildcard Mask Flexibility:
Unlike a subnet mask (which matches contiguous bits), a wildcard mask allows selective matching of non-contiguous bits.
Example:
To match all devices in the "Northeast" region (regardless of other attributes), set wildcard bits to 0 for fixed bits and 1 for variable bits.

Why Not Other Options?
A. IP Netmask
Only matches contiguous networks (e.g., 10.132.1.0/24), not arbitrary bits.
C. IP Address
Matches a single IP, not a group.
D. IP Range
Matches a sequential range, not bit-based patterns.

Example Configuration:
To match all Northeast devices (assuming bits 8-15 represent region):
Address: 10.132.0.0
Wildcard Mask: 0.0.255.255 (ignore last two octets).

Reference:
Palo Alto Address Objects Guide:
"Wildcard masks enable matching based on arbitrary bit positions in IP addresses."




Question # 7

An engineer is tasked with deploying SSL Forward Proxy decryption for their organization. What should they review with their leadership before implementation?
A. Browser-supported cipher documentation
B. Cipher documentation supported by the endpoint operating system
C. URL risk-based category distinctions
D. Legal compliance regulations and acceptable usage policies


D. Legal compliance regulations and acceptable usage policies
Explanation:
Deploying SSL Forward Proxy (Decryption) is a powerful security measure, but it also has significant legal and privacy implications. The firewall will essentially act as a "Man-in-the-Middle" (MiTM), terminating and inspecting encrypted traffic that users believe is private between their browser and the website.

Before implementing such a technology, it is absolutely critical to review this with leadership and legal counsel for the following reasons:

Legal Compliance: Many regions and countries have strict data privacy laws (such as GDPR, CCPA, etc.) that govern the monitoring of user communications. Intercepting user traffic, even for security purposes, may be restricted or require specific disclosures.

Acceptable Use Policy (AUP): The organization's AUP must explicitly state that network traffic, including encrypted traffic, is subject to monitoring for security and compliance purposes. Employees should be made aware of this practice. Without a clear AUP, decryption could lead to legal challenges from employees.

User Notification: Leadership must decide on a policy for user notification. While often not legally required to obtain individual consent in a corporate environment, it is a best practice to inform users that their traffic is being decrypted and inspected.
Reviewing these points with leadership ensures the deployment is not only technically sound but also legally defensible and aligned with the organization's ethical standards.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Browser-supported cipher documentation & B. Cipher documentation supported by the endpoint operating system:
These are important technical considerations for the engineer. They need to ensure the firewall uses ciphers that the clients (browsers and OS) support to avoid breaking legitimate applications. However, these are implementation details that do not require leadership review.

C. URL risk-based category distinctions:
This is a configuration detail for the Decryption policy. An engineer would use URL categories to decide which traffic to decrypt (e.g., decrypt "Financial Services" but not "Healthcare"). This is a technical and policy-configuration decision, not a high-level leadership discussion about legality and user privacy.

Reference:
The Palo Alto Networks Decryption Administrator's Guide and the PCNSE study materials heavily emphasize the legal and privacy considerations as a primary step before deploying decryption. It is a foundational best practice to get organizational buy-in and ensure compliance with local laws.



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.