Question # 1
Which rule type controls end user SSL traffic to external websites? A. SSL Outbound Proxyless InspectionB. SSL Forward ProxyC. SSH ProxyD. SSL Inbound Inspection
Reveal Answer
B. SSL Forward Proxy
Explanation:
SSL Forward Proxy is the decryption rule type specifically designed to control and inspect outbound SSL/TLS traffic from internal users to external websites.
How it works: The firewall acts as a man-in-the-middle for these connections. It terminates the encrypted session from the internal client, decrypts the traffic, inspects it for threats based on security policies, and then establishes a new encrypted session to the external web server.
Use Case: This is the primary method for gaining visibility into encrypted web traffic leaving your network to prevent data exfiltration and block malware.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. SSL Outbound Proxyless Inspection: This is not a valid rule type or term in PAN-OS.
C. SSH Proxy: This is unrelated to SSL/TLS web traffic. SSH Proxy is a feature for monitoring and controlling SSH sessions, not HTTPS traffic.
D. SSL Inbound Inspection: This rule type is used to decrypt inbound connections from external clients to your internal servers (e.g., a web server in your DMZ). It is the reverse of Forward Proxy and does not apply to internal users browsing the internet.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide | SSL Decryption | Decryption Policy Rules: The documentation clearly defines the two main rule types:
SSL Forward Proxy: For decrypting traffic from internal users to external networks.
SSL Inbound Inspection: For decrypting traffic from external users to internal servers.
Question # 2
Refer to the diagram. Users at an internal system want to ssh to the SSH server. The
server is configured to respond only to the ssh requests coming from IP 172.16.16.1.
In order to reach the SSH server only from the Trust zone, which Security rule and NAT
rule must be configured on the firewall? A. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: Static IP / 172.16.15.1
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshB. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: 192.168.15.0/24 -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 192.168.15.1 -
Destination Translation: Static IP / 172.16.15.10
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: 192.168.15.0/24 -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshC. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 192.168.15.1 -
Destination Translation: Static IP /172.16.15.10
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshD. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: ssh
Reveal Answer
D. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: ssh
Explanation:
The SSH server is configured to only respond to requests from IP 172.16.16.1. To meet this requirement, the firewall must perform Source NAT so that outbound SSH traffic from the Trust zone appears to originate from that specific IP.
The correct configuration is:
1.NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust
Source IP: Any
Destination Zone: Server
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
2.Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust
Source IP: Any
Destination Zone: Server
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10
Application: ssh
3.This setup ensures:
Traffic from internal users is NATed to the expected source IP.
The SSH server receives traffic that matches its configured source filter.
The firewall allows the traffic through the correct zones and application.
📘 Reference: Verified via Exam4Training PCNSE Question #71 and Ace4Sure PCNSE Scenario
Question # 3
A firewall engineer is managing a Palo Alto Networks NGFW that does not have the DHCP
server on DHCP agent configuration. Which interface mode can the broadcast DHCP
traffic? A. Virtual wareB. TapC. Layer 2D. Layer 3
Reveal Answer
C. Layer 2
Explanation:
DHCP relies on broadcast traffic (like DHCPDISCOVER and DHCPREQUEST messages) to function. For a firewall to forward these broadcasts and allow DHCP clients to communicate with a DHCP server on another subnet, it must operate at the data link layer.
C. Layer 2: Interfaces in Layer 2 mode (e.g., Layer 2, VLAN, or Aggregate Interfaces) operate like a switch. They can forward broadcast traffic, including DHCP broadcasts, between segments within the same broadcast domain. This is essential for DHCP relay/forwarding when the firewall is not the DHCP server itself.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Virtual Wire: Virtual Wire interfaces pass traffic transparently at Layer 1/Layer 2 but do not process or forward broadcasts. They are designed for inline deployment without altering the network topology, so DHCP broadcasts would not be forwarded.
B. Tap: Tap interfaces are passive monitoring-only interfaces. They receive traffic copies but cannot forward any traffic, including broadcasts.
D. Layer 3: Layer 3 interfaces route traffic at the network layer and terminate broadcast domains. By default, they do not forward broadcasts. While a Layer 3 interface can be configured as a DHCP relay agent to forward DHCP requests to a specific server, it does not broadcast the traffic; it unicasts it. The question specifies the firewall does not have the DHCP server or agent configured, so a plain Layer 3 interface would not forward DHCP broadcasts.
Reference:
PAN-OS documentation states that Layer 2 interfaces forward broadcast/multicast traffic within the same VLAN or broadcast domain (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "Layer 2 Interfaces" section). This is necessary for DHCP operations without a relay agent. In contrast, Virtual Wire and Tap interfaces do not support broadcast forwarding.
Question # 4
A firewall engineer creates a new App-ID report under Monitor > Reports > Application
Reports > New Applications to monitor new applications on the network and better assess
any Security policy updates the engineer might want to make.
How does the firewall identify the New App-ID characteristic? A. It matches to the New App-IDs downloaded in the last 90 days.
B. It matches to the New App-IDs in the most recently installed content releases.
C. It matches to the New App-IDs downloaded in the last 30 days.
D. It matches to the New App-IDs installed since the last time the firewall was rebooted.
Reveal Answer
B. It matches to the New App-IDs in the most recently installed content releases.
Explanation:
The New App-ID characteristic in Palo Alto Networks firewalls is designed to help administrators monitor newly introduced applications that may require updates to Security policy. When you create a report under Monitor > Reports > Application Reports > New Applications, the firewall identifies “new” applications based on the most recently installed content release—not based on time duration or system reboot.
This means the report will only include App-IDs that were added in the latest content update installed on the firewall, regardless of when that update was downloaded or how long ago the system was rebooted.
This behavior is confirmed in Palo Alto’s official documentation:
“The New App-ID characteristic always matches to only the new App-IDs in the most recently installed content releases.”
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Last 90 days: Time-based filtering is not used. The firewall doesn’t track App-ID age by days.
C. Last 30 days: Same issue—App-ID identification is based on content version, not time.
D. Since last reboot: Rebooting the firewall has no impact on App-ID classification. The report is tied to content updates, not system uptime.
🔗 Reference:
You can find this behavior detailed in Palo Alto’s Monitor New App-IDs documentation
Question # 5
In which two scenarios would it be necessary to use Proxy IDs when configuring site-to-site
VPN Tunnels? (Choose two.) A. Firewalls which support policy-based VPNs.B. The remote device is a non-Palo Alto Networks firewall.C. Firewalls which support route-based VPNs.D. The remote device is a Palo Alto Networks firewall.
Reveal Answer
A. Firewalls which support policy-based VPNs.B. The remote device is a non-Palo Alto Networks firewall.
Explanation:
Proxy IDs are used in IPSec VPN configurations to define the specific traffic selectors (source and destination subnets) that should be protected by the VPN tunnel. They are especially necessary when interoperability or policy-based VPN behavior is involved.
✅ A. Firewalls which support policy-based VPNs
Policy-based VPNs (common in vendors like Fortinet, Cisco ASA, and older Juniper devices) rely on proxy IDs to define which traffic should be encrypted.
Palo Alto Networks firewalls use route-based VPNs, but when connecting to a policy-based peer, proxy IDs must be explicitly configured to match the peer’s expectations.
✅ B. The remote device is a non-Palo Alto Networks firewall
Non-Palo Alto firewalls often require explicit proxy ID definitions to match their encryption domains.
Without matching proxy IDs, the VPN tunnel may establish but traffic won’t flow due to mismatched selectors.
❌ Why C and D Are Incorrect:
C. Firewalls which support route-based VPNs Route-based VPNs (like Palo Alto to Palo Alto) do not require proxy IDs unless there's a specific need to define traffic selectors. They use tunnel interfaces and routing to direct traffic.
D. The remote device is a Palo Alto Networks firewall When both ends are Palo Alto firewalls, proxy IDs are optional. The firewalls can dynamically negotiate traffic selectors unless strict matching is needed for policy enforcement.
🔗 References:
Palo Alto Networks official guide on Proxy ID for IPSec VPN
Ace4Sure PCNSE Practice Question
Question # 6
An administrator is configuring a Panorama device group. Which two objects are
configurable? (Choose two.) A. DNS Proxy
B. SSL/TLS profiles
C. address groups
D. URL Filtering profiles
Reveal Answer
C. address groups
D. URL Filtering profiles
Explanation:
To understand why, you must remember the core principle of the Panorama Device Group structure: its purpose is to push shared policy and object configurations to a group of firewalls. The key is knowing which configurations are universal (shared) and which are specific to a firewall's placement in the network (unique).
Device Groups are used for policies and objects that can be shared across multiple firewalls. Let's break down the correct answers:
C. address groups
Why it's configurable: Address groups (and other object types like address objects, service objects, and service groups) are abstract definitions (e.g., "Finance-Servers" = 10.10.10.0/24). These definitions are perfectly reusable across many firewalls. By configuring them in a Device Group, you ensure consistency and simplify policy management for all firewalls in that group.
D. URL Filtering profiles
Why it's configurable: Security profiles (URL Filtering, Anti-Virus, Vulnerability Protection, etc.) are policy building blocks. You can define a "Standard-Web-Policy" profile in a Device Group and then reference that same profile in the Security policies of all member firewalls. This ensures a uniform security posture across the organization.
Detailed Analysis of the Incorrect Options:
A. DNS Proxy
Why it's NOT configurable: DNS Proxy is a network service that must be bound to a specific VLAN or interface on a firewall. Since each firewall has unique interfaces and network placements, this configuration cannot be shared across a group of devices. This type of network configuration is pushed from Templates, not Device Groups.
B. SSL/TLS profiles
Why it's NOT configurable (in this context): This is a subtle but important distinction. While you can create an SSL/TLS Service Profile (which contains the certificates and trust settings) in a Device Group, you cannot apply it to an interface or service there. The application of the profile (e.g., assigning it to a Decryption policy) is done in a Device Group, but the core profile configuration that includes interface-specific settings is a Template-level function. More importantly, the actual decryption rules that use the profile are configured in the Device Group. However, given the option list and the standard PCNSE curriculum, this is not considered a primary "object" for a Device Group in the same way as Address Groups or Security Profiles. The safest answer is that it's primarily a Template/Network function.
PCNSE Exam Reference & Key Takeaway:
Core Concept: The separation of duties between Device Groups and Templates in Panorama.
Device Groups: For policies and shared objects (Security, NAT, Decryption Policies, Address Groups, Service Groups, Security Profiles).
Templates: For network configuration (Interfaces, Zones, Virtual Routers, VLANs, DNS Proxy, DHCP Server, SSL/TLS Service Profiles for inbound decryption).
Simplified Rule of Thumb: If the configuration answers "What is the rule?" or "What is the security setting?", it goes in a Device Group. If it answers "Where is the firewall connected?" or "How is a network service provided?", it goes in a Template.
Question # 7
An engineer is monitoring an active/active high availability (HA) firewall pair.
Which HA firewall state describes the firewall that is currently processing traffic? A. InitialB. PassiveC. ActiveD. Active-primary
Reveal Answer
C. Active
Explanation:
1.HA Modes in PAN-OS
Active/Passive HA: One firewall is active (processes traffic), the other is passive (standby, syncing config/state).
Active/Active HA: Both firewalls are in an active state, and both process traffic simultaneously. They share session information and load-balance traffic.
2.HA States Defined
Initial → Temporary state during boot or HA setup; not passing traffic.
Passive → Standby mode (used only in Active/Passive). It never processes traffic.
Active → Firewall is actively processing traffic. This applies in both Active/Active and Active/Passive.
Active-primary → ⚠️ Not an official HA state. In Active/Active, roles like active-primary and active-secondary describe priority/preference for session ownership, but the HA state is still “Active.”
3.So in Active/Active Monitoring:
If you want to know which firewall(s) are processing traffic → look for state = Active.
“Active-primary” is not a state, but a designation for deterministic failover (device priority).
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks — HA States
🔗 PAN-OS Admin Guide – HA Firewall States
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.