Your Path to PCNSE Certification Success

Practice makes perfect—and our PCNSE practice test make passing a certainty. Get ready to conquer your exam with ease! Prepare PCNSE Exam

image image image image image image
3000

Monthly Visitors

1

PCNSE Exam

250+

Questions With Answers

250

Students Passed

5

Monthly Updates

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

Which three statements accurately describe Decryption Mirror? (Choose three.)
A. Decryption Mirror requires a tap interface on the firewall
B. Use of Decryption Mirror might enable malicious users with administrative access to the firewall to harvest sensitive information that is submitted via an encrypted channel
C. Only management consent is required to use the Decryption Mirror feature.
D. Decryption, storage, inspection, and use of SSL traffic are regulated in certain countries.
E. You should consult with your corporate counsel before activating and using Decryption Mirror in a production environment.


B. Use of Decryption Mirror might enable malicious users with administrative access to the firewall to harvest sensitive information that is submitted via an encrypted channel
D. Decryption, storage, inspection, and use of SSL traffic are regulated in certain countries.
E. You should consult with your corporate counsel before activating and using Decryption Mirror in a production environment.
Explanation:

B. Use of Decryption Mirror might enable malicious users with administrative access to the firewall to harvest sensitive information that is submitted via an encrypted channel.
Decryption Mirror sends a copy of decrypted traffic (e.g., passwords, banking data, medical info) out a dedicated interface.
If someone gains access to this traffic (even an admin), they could capture sensitive user data.
Security implication: High risk of data exposure if not tightly controlled.

D. Decryption, storage, inspection, and use of SSL traffic are regulated in certain countries. Some countries (e.g., Germany, France, and others in EU under GDPR) have strict regulations on SSL/TLS interception and data privacy.
Organizations must comply with local data protection laws before deploying Decryption Mirror.

E. You should consult with your corporate counsel before activating and using Decryption Mirror in a production environment. Because decrypted traffic contains sensitive personal and corporate data, enabling this feature without legal review can lead to compliance violations.
Palo Alto best practice: Always consult legal before enabling Decryption Mirror.

❌ Incorrect Options
A. Decryption Mirror requires a tap interface on the firewall.
Decryption Mirror does not require a TAP interface. Instead, it requires configuring a dedicated Layer 3/Layer 2 interface as the mirror output.
TAP mode on a firewall is used for passive traffic monitoring, not specifically for Decryption Mirror.

C. Only management consent is required to use the Decryption Mirror feature.
It’s not just about management approval. Legal, compliance, and security teams must also be involved.
Relying only on “management consent” ignores regulatory/legal requirements.

📖 References
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: About Decryption Mirror
Palo Alto Best Practices Guide: Always involve legal counsel before enabling Decryption Mirror due to potential regulatory implications.




Question # 2

Which source is the most reliable for collecting User-ID user mapping?
A. Syslog Listener
B. Microsoft Exchange
C. Microsoft Active Directory
D. GlobalProtect


C. Microsoft Active Directory
Explanation:

Microsoft Active Directory (AD) is the most reliable source for collecting User-ID user mapping because it serves as the central authentication system in most enterprises, providing real-time, accurate IP-to-user mappings via security event logs (e.g., Event ID 4624) through the User-ID agent. Its scalability and comprehensive coverage of domain-joined devices make it ideal.

A. Syslog Listener:
Less reliable as it depends on external devices’ logging consistency, which can be inconsistent or incomplete.
B. Microsoft Exchange:
Limited to email-related events, making it narrow and less reliable for full user mapping.
C. Microsoft Active Directory:
As explained, the most reliable due to its authoritative and real-time data.
D. GlobalProtect:
Reliable for VPN users but incomplete, as it only covers GlobalProtect clients, not all internal users.

References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: User-ID with Active Directory
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: User Mapping Sources
ExamTopics PCNSE Discussion: User-ID Reliability




Question # 3

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


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 # 4

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 # 5

An administrator wants to enable WildFire inline machine learning. Which three file types does WildFire inline ML analyze? (Choose three.)
A. Powershell scripts
B. VBscripts
C. MS Office
D. APK
E. ELF


A. Powershell scripts
C. MS Office
E. ELF
Explanation:
WildFire Inline Machine Learning (ML) is a feature in Palo Alto Networks firewalls that enables real-time analysis and prevention of malicious files directly on the firewall’s dataplane using machine learning models. It dynamically evaluates specific file types to detect and block threats without requiring cloud analysis. The question focuses on identifying the file types supported by WildFire Inline ML for analysis, which is critical for the PCNSE exam. Below is a concise explanation of why these three options are correct, why the others are incorrect, and relevant technical details, adhering to a 500-word limit.

Correct Answers
A. PowerShell scripts:
WildFire Inline ML supports analysis of PowerShell scripts (.ps1) using dedicated classification engines (e.g., PowerShell Scripts 1 and PowerShell Scripts 2). These engines evaluate script content in real-time to detect malicious behavior, such as obfuscated code or command execution patterns, enabling the firewall to block threats like script-based malware. Example: A malicious PowerShell script attempting to download a payload is blocked inline.
C. MS Office:
WildFire Inline ML analyzes MS Office files (e.g., DOC, DOCX, XLS, XLSX, PPT, PPTX) and Office Open XML (OOXML) files. The ML models inspect file structures and macros to identify malicious content, such as embedded exploits or phishing payloads, in real-time. Example: A Word document with a malicious macro is dropped before execution.
E. ELF:
Executable and Linkable Format (ELF) files, commonly used in Linux systems, are supported by WildFire Inline ML starting with PAN-OS content release 8367 and later. The ML engine evaluates ELF file details, such as decoder fields and patterns, to detect malicious Linux binaries in real-time. Example: A malicious ELF binary targeting Linux servers is blocked inline.

Why Other Options Are Incorrect
B. VBscripts:
While WildFire cloud analysis supports VBScript (.vbs) files, WildFire Inline ML does not currently include a specific VBScript analysis engine. Inline ML focuses on PowerShell scripts, MS Office, ELF, and other select file types, making VBScript incorrect.
D. APK:
Android Application Package (APK) files are supported by WildFire cloud analysis for Android malware detection, but WildFire Inline ML does not currently include an APK-specific analysis engine. Inline ML prioritizes file types like PowerShell, MS Office, and ELF.

Technical Details
Configuration:
Enable WildFire Inline ML in an Antivirus Profile under Objects > Security Profiles > Antivirus WildFire Inline ML.
Select enable for models (e.g., PowerShell Scripts, MSOffice, ELF) and set actions (e.g., drop, alert).
CLI:
set profiles antivirus wildfire-ml enable.
Requirements:
Requires an active WildFire subscription and PAN-OS content release 8367+ for ELF support.
Monitoring:
Check threat logs (Monitor > Logs > Threat) for ml-virus entries to verify Inline ML detections.
False Positives:
Add file hash exceptions under Antivirus Profile > WildFire Inline ML > File Exceptions to exclude benign files.

PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your knowledge of advanced threat prevention features, including WildFire Inline ML. Understanding supported file types ensures correct configuration of Antivirus Profiles for real-time threat detection.

References
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (WildFire What’s New Guide):
Confirms ELF support for WildFire Inline ML.
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (Enable Advanced WildFire Inline ML):
Details PowerShell script support.
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (Advanced WildFire Inline ML):
Lists MS Office, ELF, and PowerShell as supported file types.
Exam4Training (PCNSE Question):
Clarifies APK and VBScript are not supported by Inline ML. Quizlet (PCNSE Flashcards):
Confirms MS Office support for Inline ML.




Question # 6

Which two profiles should be configured when sharing tags from threat logs with a remote User-ID agent? (Choose two.)
A. Log Ingestion
B. HTTP
C. Log Forwarding
D. LDAP


B. HTTP
C. Log Forwarding
Explanation:

1. Recall how tag sharing works
Palo Alto firewalls can tag IPs based on log events (e.g., threat logs, traffic logs).
Those tags can be exported to a remote User-ID agent for consumption (for example, to populate Dynamic Address Groups).
To make this happen, you need two things:
A Log Forwarding profile to send the log entries.
An HTTP profile to define how logs are forwarded (via XML API to the User-ID agent).

2. Analyze the options
A. Log Ingestion
Not a configurable profile in PAN-OS. PAN-OS ingests logs, but this isn’t a profile type you configure. ❌
B. HTTP
✅ Yes. You need an HTTP Server Profile that defines how logs are sent (destination = User-ID agent or Cortex Data Lake, etc.).
C. Log Forwarding
✅ Yes. You attach a Log Forwarding Profile to the security rule or threat log, specifying that logs should be forwarded to the HTTP server.
D. LDAP
LDAP profiles are used for authentication and group mapping, not for sharing tags via logs. ❌

📖 Reference
Palo Alto Networks:
Forward Logs to an HTTP Destination
Palo Alto Networks:
Use Log Forwarding to Tag/Detag




Question # 7

Four configuration choices are listed, and each could be used to block access to a specific URL. If you configured each choice to block the same URL, then which choice would be evaluated last in the processing order to block access to the URL?
A. Custom URL category in URL Filtering profile
B. EDL in URL Filtering profile
C. PAN-DB URL category in URL Filtering profile
D. Custom URL category in Security policy rule


D. Custom URL category in Security policy rule
Explanation:
To determine the processing order, you must understand the hierarchy of policy enforcement on a Palo Alto Networks firewall. The system evaluates different components in a strict sequence, and a traffic flow must pass through all of them to be allowed.

The relevant order for this question is:
URL Filtering Profile (PAN-DB & EDL): The firewall first checks the URL against the URL Filtering profile attached to the matching Security policy. Within the profile, it evaluates the URL against its configured settings in a specific internal order.
Security Policy Rule (Custom URL Category): Only after the traffic has been evaluated and allowed by the URL Filtering profile does it proceed to be evaluated by the Security policy rule again for the final permit/deny decision. The custom URL category applied directly to the Security policy rule is part of this final check.

Let's break down why D is evaluated last:
A, B. and C are all components of a URL Filtering Profile. The firewall processes the URL Filtering profile as a single step. It checks the requested URL against the PAN-DB category (C), any External Dynamic Lists (EDLs) (B), and any custom URL categories (A) defined within that profile. The result of this entire profile evaluation (allow, block, alert, continue) is determined here. If the profile is set to block based on any of these three internal components (A, B, or C), the traffic is dropped immediately and never reaches the final Security Policy rule evaluation.
D .is part of the Security Policy Rule. A custom URL category can be added as a matching criterion directly in a Security policy rule. For the firewall to even consider this criterion, the traffic must have first been allowed by the URL Filtering profile. If the traffic was not blocked by the profile, it then moves to the final step: the Security policy rule check. Here, if the URL matches the custom category and the rule's action is set to deny, it will be blocked at this final stage.
Therefore, a block action triggered by a custom URL category in the Security policy rule (D) occurs after the traffic has successfully passed through (was allowed by) the URL Filtering profile.

Detailed Analysis of the Processing Order:
URL Filtering Profile Evaluation: The URL is checked.
Is it in a PAN-DB category set to block? (C) -> Blocked HERE.
Is it on an EDL set to block? (B) -> Blocked HERE.
Is it in a custom category within the profile set to block? (A) -> Blocked HERE.
If none of the above trigger a block, the profile allows the traffic to continue to the next step.
Security Policy Rule Evaluation: The traffic, now allowed by the URL Filtering profile, is evaluated against the Security policy rule.
Does the URL match the custom URL category defined in this rule? (D)
If yes, and the action is deny -> Blocked HERE (LAST).

PCNSE Exam Reference & Key Takeaway:
Core Concept: Policy Evaluation Order. A key mantra is "Profiles before Policy." Security profiles (URL Filtering, Vulnerability, Anti-Virus, etc.) are evaluated before the final allow/deny action of the Security policy rule is executed.
Troubleshooting: If a URL is being blocked and you can't figure out why, check the Traffic logs. The logs will clearly show the distinct phases:
A log-end reason of "url-block" indicates it was blocked by the URL Filtering profile (A, B, or C).
A log-end reason of "deny" indicates it was matched and blocked by the Security policy rule itself (D).

Use Case:
Placing a block in the Security policy (D) is useful for creating very explicit, high-priority deny rules that you want to be visible directly in the policy list. However, most URL blocking is efficiently handled within the URL Filtering profile.



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.