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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.


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Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

A firewall administrator wants to be able at to see all NAT sessions that are going ‘through a firewall with source NAT. Which CLI command can the administrator use?
A. show session all filter nat-rule-source
B. show running nat-rule-ippool rule "rule_name
C. show running nat-policy
D. show session all filter nat source


D. show session all filter nat source
Explanation:

Why This Command?
The show session all filter nat source command displays all sessions where source NAT is applied.
It filters sessions specifically for source NAT translations, which is what the administrator needs.

Breakdown of the Command:
show session all → Displays all active sessions.
filter nat source → Filters to show only sessions with source NAT.

Why Not the Other Options?
A. show session all filter nat-rule-source → Incorrect syntax (no such filter exists).
B. show running nat-rule-ippool rule "rule_name" → Shows NAT pool configuration, not active NAT sessions.
C. show running nat-policy → Displays configured NAT policies, not live NAT sessions.

Additional Useful NAT Commands:
show session all filter nat → Shows all NAT sessions (source & destination).
show running nat-policy → Lists configured NAT rules.
show session id → Inspects a specific NAT session.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks CLI Reference Guide (under Session Monitoring & NAT Commands).




Question # 2

How can a firewall be set up to automatically block users as soon as they are found to exhibit malicious behavior via a threat log?
A. Configure a dynamic address group for the addresses to be blocked with the tag "malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these addresses when logs are generated in the threat log. Under Device > User Identification > Trusted Source Address, add the condition "NOT malicious."
B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this user group.
C. Configure the appropriate security profiles for Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, and Vulnerability Prevention, create signature policies for the relevant signatures and/or severities. Under the "Actions" tab in "Signature Policies," select "block-user."
D. N/A


B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this user group.
Explanation:
To automatically block users exhibiting malicious behavior based on threat log entries in a Palo Alto Networks firewall, the solution must leverage dynamic user groups and log forwarding to tag and block users dynamically. The firewall’s User-ID feature, combined with Log Forwarding Profiles, allows tagging users based on threat log events (e.g., malware detection) and applying policies to block them.

Correct Answer
B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this user group.:
Step 1:
Create a dynamic user group under Objects > Dynamic User Groups with a match condition for the tag "malicious" (e.g., tag eq malicious). This group dynamically includes users tagged with "malicious" based on threat log events.
Step 2:
Configure a Log Forwarding Profile under Objects > Log Forwarding, adding a match list for Threat logs (e.g., severity: critical, high) with an action to tag the source user with "malicious" (under User Tag > Tag).
Step 3:
Attach the Log Forwarding Profile to relevant security policies under Policies > Security > Actions > Log Forwarding to trigger tagging when threats are detected.
Step 4:
Create a security policy to block traffic from the dynamic user group (under Policies > Security, set Source User to the "malicious" dynamic user group, action: deny). This setup ensures users are automatically tagged and blocked when malicious behavior is detected in threat logs (e.g., malware or exploits).
Example:
A user downloading malware triggers a threat log, gets tagged "malicious," and is blocked by a deny policy.

Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Configure a dynamic address group for the addresses to be blocked with the tag "malicious." ... Under Device > User Identification > Trusted Source Address, add the condition "NOT malicious.":
While dynamic address groups can tag IP addresses, the question focuses on blocking users, not IPs. Additionally, Device > User Identification > Trusted Source Address does not exist in PAN-OS; User-ID configurations are under User Mapping or Dynamic User Groups, and "NOT malicious" is not a valid condition, making this option incorrect.

C. Configure the appropriate security profiles for Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, and Vulnerability Prevention, create signature policies for the relevant signatures and/or severities. Under the "Actions" tab in "Signature Policies," select "block-user.":
Security profiles (Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, Vulnerability Protection) define actions like block or alert for traffic, not users. There is no "Signature Policies" section or "block-user" action in PAN-OS security profiles. Blocking users requires User-ID and dynamic user groups, not signature-based actions, making this option invalid.

D. N/A:
This option implies no solution exists, which is incorrect since dynamic user groups with log forwarding provide a clear method to block users based on threat logs.

Technical Details

Configuration:
Create dynamic user group:
Objects > Dynamic User Groups, set match to tag eq malicious.
Create Log Forwarding Profile:
Objects > Log Forwarding, add match list for Threat logs, set action to tag user with "malicious".
Attach to security policy:
Policies > Security > Actions > Log Forwarding. Create block policy:
Policies > Security, set Source User to the dynamic user group, action: deny.
CLI:
set user-id dynamic-user-group match tag malicious, set log-settings profiles match-list log-type threat tag malicious.
Monitoring:
Check tagged users in Monitor > Logs > User-ID or CLI (show user ip-user-mapping all).
Best Practice:
Use specific threat severities (e.g., critical, high) in the Log Forwarding Profile to avoid over-tagging.

PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your ability to use User-ID and dynamic user groups for automated policy enforcement based on threat detection, a key feature for dynamic security responses.

References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (PAN-OS Admin Guide):
Details dynamic user groups and log forwarding for tagging users based on threat logs.
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base (Article ID: 000068901):
Clarifies dynamic user groups versus dynamic address groups for User-ID policies.




Question # 3

An administrator wants to use LDAP, TACACS+, and Kerberos as external authentication services for authenticating users. What should the administrator be aware of regarding the authentication sequence, based on the Authentication profile in the order Kerberos LDAP, and TACACS+?
A. The firewall evaluates the profiles in the alphabetical order the Authentication profiles have been named until one profile successfully authenticates the user.
B. The firewall evaluates the profiles in top-to-bottom order until one Authentication profile successfully authenticates the user.
C. The priority assigned to the Authentication profile defines the order of the sequence.
D. If the authentication times cut for the firs: Authentication profile in the authentication sequence, no further authentication attempts will be made


B. The firewall evaluates the profiles in top-to-bottom order until one Authentication profile successfully authenticates the user.
Explanation:
When you configure Authentication Sequences on a Palo Alto firewall:
You first create individual Authentication Profiles (e.g., Kerberos, LDAP, TACACS+).
Then you create an Authentication Sequence, which lists those profiles in a top-to-bottom order.

During authentication:
The firewall checks the first profile in the list.
If it fails (e.g., user not found or authentication denied), it moves to the next profile in the sequence.
The process continues until one profile succeeds, or all fail.
📘 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks – Configure Authentication Sequences

❌ Why not the other options?
A. Alphabetical order
→ Incorrect. The order is explicitly defined by the admin in the Authentication Sequence, not by profile name.
C. Priority assigned
→ Incorrect. There is no numeric priority setting; the list order defines priority.
D. No further attempts if first times out
→ Incorrect. If the first method times out or fails, the firewall continues to the next profile in the sequence.




Question # 4

The firewall team has been asked to deploy a new Panorama server and to forward all firewall logs to this server By default, which component of the Palo Alto Networks firewall architect is responsible for log forwarding and should be checked for early signs of overutilization?
A. Management plane CPU
B. Dataplane CPU
C. Packet buffers
D. On-chip packet descriptors


A. Management plane CPU
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks firewall, different planes handle different responsibilities:

Dataplane (DP):
Handles traffic processing (App-ID, Content-ID, session handling, encryption, etc.).
Uses dedicated CPUs (network processors, security processors).
Optimized for packet flow, not log forwarding.

Management plane (MP):
Handles management tasks like GUI/CLI, configuration commits, and log processing & log forwarding.
Whenever logs need to be sent to Panorama, SIEM, or external log collectors, this is done by the management plane CPU.

Packet buffers:
Buffers used in the dataplane for temporary packet storage.
If overutilized, you see packet drops — but unrelated to log forwarding.

On-chip packet descriptors:
Hardware structures in the dataplane to describe packets in processing pipelines.
Again, related to traffic handling, not log forwarding.
👉 Therefore, the correct component responsible for log forwarding is the Management Plane CPU.
If the firewall is forwarding a large volume of logs to Panorama, you should monitor MP CPU utilization for early signs of overloading.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Firewall Architecture Overview
PAN KB: Which plane processes what?




Question # 5

A firewall administrator to have visibility on one segment of the company network. The traffic on the segment is routed on the Backbone switch. The administrator is planning to apply security rules on segment X after getting the visibility. There is already a PAN-OS firewall used in L3 mode as an internet gateway, and there are enough system resources to get extra traffic on the firewall. The administrator needs to complete this operation with minimum service interruptions and without making any IP changes. What is the best option for the administrator to take?
A. Configure a Layer 3 interface for segment X on the firewall
B. Configure the TAP interface for segment X on the firewall.
C. Configure a new vsys for segment X on the firewall
D. Configure vwire interfaces for segment X on the firewall


D. Configure vwire interfaces for segment X on the firewall
Explanation:
The best option for gaining visibility and applying security rules to Segment X, which is routed through a backbone switch, without changing IP addressing or causing service interruptions, is to use Virtual Wire (vwire) interfaces.
Virtual Wire mode allows the firewall to be inserted transparently between two Layer 2 or Layer 3 devices. It does not require IP addressing changes, routing updates, or reconfiguration of the existing network. Traffic flows through the firewall as if it were a physical wire, while still allowing full inspection, logging, and enforcement of security policies.

This makes vwire ideal for:
Inline deployments with minimal disruption
Environments where IP changes are not permitted
Applying security policies to routed traffic without redesigning the network

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Configure a Layer 3 interface for segment X on the firewall This requires IP addressing and routing changes, which violates the requirement for no IP changes and minimal service interruption.
B. Configure the TAP interface for segment X on the firewall TAP mode provides visibility only, without the ability to enforce security policies. It’s passive and cannot block or shape traffic.
C. Configure a new vsys for segment X on the firewall Virtual systems (vsys) are used for multi-tenancy, not for traffic visibility or enforcement. They don’t solve the routing or inline inspection requirement.

References:
Vcedump PCNSE Question 71
ITExamSolutions: Segment Visibility with Minimal Disruption




Question # 6

An administrator is attempting to create policies tor deployment of a device group and template stack. When creating the policies, the zone drop down list does not include the required zone. What must the administrator do to correct this issue?
A. Specify the target device as the master device in the device group
B. Enable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" in Panorama settings
C. Add the template as a reference template in the device group
D. Add a firewall to both the device group and the template


C. Add the template as a reference template in the device group
Explanation:
In Panorama, when creating policies for a device group and template stack, the zone dropdown list will only show zones that are defined in the template and associated with a firewall. If no firewall is added to both the device group and the template, Panorama cannot correlate the zone definitions with a real device, and the dropdown will appear incomplete.

To fix this:
Ensure that the firewall is added to both:
The device group (for policy management)
The template (for interface and zone definitions)
This allows Panorama to correctly populate zone objects in the policy editor.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Specify the target device as the master device in the device group This is used for reference configuration comparison, not for zone population.
B. Enable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" This affects object sharing, not zone visibility.
C. Add the template as a reference template in the device group Reference templates are used for inheritance, not for linking zones to policies.

🔗 Reference:
Exam4Training PCNSE Question
Palo Alto Networks KB: New Zone Not Visible in Panorama




Question # 7

An enterprise network security team is deploying VM-Series firewalls in a multi-cloud environment. Some firewalls are deployed in VMware NSX-V, while others are in AWS, and all are centrally managed using Panorama with the appropriate plugins installed. The team wants to streamline policy management by organizing the firewalls into device groups in which the AWS-based firewalls act as a parent device group, while the NSX-V firewalls are configured as a child device group to inherit Security policies. However, after configuring the device group hierarchy and attempting to push configurations, the team receives errors, and policy inheritance is not functioning as expected. What is the most likely cause of this issue?
A. Panorama must use the same plugin version numbers for both AWS and NSX-V environments before device group inheritance can function properly
B. Panorama requires the objects to be overridden in the child device group before firewalls in different hypervisors can inherit Security policies
C. Panorama by default does not allow different hypervisors in parent/child device groups, but this can be overridden with the command "set device-group allow-multi-hypervisor enable"
D. Panorama does not support policy inheritance across device groups containing firewalls deployed in different hypervisors when using multiple plugins


D. Panorama does not support policy inheritance across device groups containing firewalls deployed in different hypervisors when using multiple plugins
Explanation:
Panorama uses plugins to manage cloud-specific integrations and configurations for VM-Series firewalls (e.g., AWS plugin for Amazon Web Services, NSX plugin for VMware NSX). Each plugin generates unique configuration elements tailored to its respective cloud environment.

Key Issue:
When firewalls with different plugins (e.g., AWS and NSX-V) are placed in a parent-child device group hierarchy, Panorama cannot reconcile the incompatible plugin-specific configurations during policy inheritance.
For example, AWS-based firewalls require settings like IAM roles or VPC tags, while NSX-V firewalls need NSX-specific network mappings. These configurations are mutually exclusive and cannot be inherited across plugins.
This incompatibility results in errors when pushing policies, as Panorama attempts to apply irrelevant or conflicting settings to firewalls in the child group.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Mismatched plugin versions might cause issues, but even with identical versions, mixing plugin types (AWS vs. NSX-V) is fundamentally unsupported.
B. Overriding objects in the child group does not resolve the core incompatibility between hypervisor-specific plugins. Inheritance fails at the plugin level, not just at the object level.
C. There is no CLI command set device-group allow-multi-hypervisor enable. This is a fabricated option; Panorama does not allow overriding this restriction.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation:
The Panorama administrator guide explicitly states that device groups must contain firewalls with consistent deployment environments (e.g., all AWS or all NSX) for inheritance to work. Mixing plugins breaks inheritance.
PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 5: Panorama):
Understanding device group constraints and plugin compatibility is essential for centralized management in multi-cloud deployments.



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.