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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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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.
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Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

Which tool will allow review of the policy creation logic to verify that unwanted traffic is not allowed?
A. Managed Devices Health
B. Test Policy Match
C. Preview Changes
D. Policy Optimizer


B. Test Policy Match
Explanation:
Test Policy Match (available in the PAN-OS web interface under Policies > Security) is designed specifically to validate policy logic. You can input details such as source/destination zones, IP addresses, users, applications, and ports to test which security rule the firewall would apply to the traffic. This helps:
Identify if unwanted traffic is inadvertently allowed by a rule.
Verify that the intended rule matches the traffic correctly.
Troubleshoot policy misconfigurations before committing changes.
It is the direct method to audit and verify policy behavior without generating actual traffic.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Managed Devices Health:
This Panorama tool monitors device status (e.g., up/down state, HA health) but does not analyze policy logic or traffic matching.
C. Preview Changes:
This shows a diff of configuration changes before commit but does not simulate traffic or test policy matches.
D. Policy Optimizer:
This analyzes traffic logs to recommend policy adjustments (e.g., removing unused rules) but does not actively test hypothetical traffic against policies.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide:
The "Test Security Policy Match" section describes how to use this tool to verify policy
behavior. PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 3:
Security Policies and Profiles): Understanding how to validate and troubleshoot security policies is a core objective.




Question # 2

A network security administrator has an environment with multiple forms of authentication. There is a network access control system in place that authenticates and restricts access for wireless users, multiple Windows domain controllers, and an MDM solution for company-provided smartphones. All of these devices have their authentication events logged. Given the information, what is the best choice for deploying User-ID to ensure maximum coverage?
A. Captive portal
B. Standalone User-ID agent
C. Syslog listener
D. Agentless User-ID with redistribution


C. Syslog listener
Explanation:
The environment has multiple, diverse authentication sources (network access control for wireless, Windows domain controllers, and an MDM for smartphones), all generating authentication logs. The Syslog listener on the User-ID agent (or the firewall itself) can be configured to parse these syslog messages from all these different systems. This allows the firewall to collect IP-to-username mappings from every authentication event, regardless of the source, ensuring maximum coverage.

Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Captive portal:
This only captures users who explicitly authenticate via a web portal. It would miss all passive authentications happening via the NAC, Windows logins, and MDM.
B. Standalone User-ID agent:
While the agent can integrate with some systems (like WMI for Windows DCs), it lacks native connectors for many NAC systems and MDM solutions. Its coverage would be limited compared to syslog, which is a universal logging format.
D. Agentless User-ID with redistribution:
This refers to using a intermediate server to collect logs and redistribute them, but it adds complexity. The native syslog listener capability is already designed to directly ingest and parse logs from these varied sources without an additional redistribution layer.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks documentation emphasizes the syslog listener as the most flexible method for aggregating user mappings from heterogeneous sources (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "User-ID Syslog Listening" section). By creating custom parsers for each log format, the firewall can achieve comprehensive coverage across NACs, MDMs, and domain controllers.




Question # 3

A firewall engineer reviews the PAN-OS GlobalProtect application and sees that it implicitly uses web-browsing and depends on SSL. When creating a new rule, what is needed to allow the application to resolve dependencies?
A. Add SSL and web-browsing applications to the same rule.
B. Add web-browsing application to the same rule.
C. Add SSL application to the same rule.
D. SSL and web-browsing must both be explicitly allowed.


A. Add SSL and web-browsing applications to the same rule.
Explanation:
In PAN-OS, every application has a set of dependencies and implicit uses. For GlobalProtect, the application:

Depends on SSL
→ must be explicitly allowed in the same rule
Implicitly uses web-browsing
→ does not require explicit allowance, but including it avoids misclassification delays during App-ID identification

To ensure full functionality and proper App-ID resolution, both SSL and web-browsing should be added to the same rule. This guarantees that the firewall can correctly identify and allow GlobalProtect traffic without delay or drop.

❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Add web-browsing application to the same rule
→ Misses the required SSL dependency. GlobalProtect won’t work without SSL explicitly allowed.
C. Add SSL application to the same rule
→ Misses the implicit web-browsing usage. While technically functional, it may delay App-ID resolution.
D. SSL and web-browsing must both be explicitly allowed
→ Misleading. Only SSL is a dependency; web-browsing is implicitly used and doesn’t require explicit allowance unless you want to optimize App-ID recognition.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks – What is Application Dependency
PCNSE Dependency Resolution Guide




Question # 4

An administrator plans to install the Windows-Based User-ID Agent to prevent credential phishing. Which installer package file should the administrator download from the support site?
A. UaCredlnstall64-11.0.0.msi
B. GlobalProtect64-6.2.1.msi
C. Talnstall-11.0.0.msi
D. Ualnstall-11.0.0msi


A. UaCredlnstall64-11.0.0.msi
Explanation:
This question tests your knowledge of the specific components involved in deploying the User-ID agent and their purpose, particularly for mitigating credential phishing.

1. The Goal: Prevent Credential Phishing
The key phrase is "prevent credential phishing." The standard User-ID agent collects IP-to-username mappings. To actively prevent phishing, you need an agent that can also intercept and block authentication attempts to unauthorized sites. This is the job of the Credential Theft Protection feature.

2. The Components: User-ID Agent vs. Credential Theft Add-on
The Windows-Based User-ID Agent consists of two main parts:
1.Core User-ID Agent (UaInstall-*.msi):
This is the base agent. Its primary function is to gather user information from Windows systems (via WMI or NetAPI) and report IP-to-username mappings back to the firewall. It helps in identifying users for policy enforcement but does not actively prevent phishing on its own.
2.Credential Theft Add-on (UaCredInstall-*.msi):
This is an additional package that installs on top of the core User-ID agent. It enables the Credential Theft Protection feature. This add-on:
Monitors system for authentication events (e.g., when a user enters a password).
Checks the target of the authentication against a list of known legitimate domains configured on the firewall.
Blocks the authentication attempt if the target domain is not authorized, thereby preventing the user from accidentally submitting their credentials to a phishing site.

3. Why the Correct Answer is A
A. UaCredInstall64-11.0.0.msi
This is the installer for the Credential Theft Add-on (UaCredInstall).
The 64 indicates the 64-bit version.
The 11.0.0 indicates the version, which should match the version of PAN-OS or be compatible as per the compatibility matrix.
Installing this package on Windows endpoints is the direct method to enable the feature that prevents credential phishing.

4. Why the Other Options Are Incorrect
B. GlobalProtect64-6.2.1.msi
Incorrect. This is the installer for the GlobalProtect VPN client. While GlobalProtect can also perform Host Information Profile (HIP) checks and enforce security policy, it is not the specific agent used for Credential Theft Protection. Its primary function is providing remote access and endpoint compliance.
C. Talnstall-11.0.0.msi
Incorrect. This is a distractor. There is no official Palo Alto Networks agent with this naming convention. The correct prefix for the core agent is UaInstall (User-ID Agent Install).
D. Ualnstall-11.0.0.msi
Incorrect. This is the installer for the core User-ID Agent (UaInstall). While this agent is required as a prerequisite for the Credential Theft Add-on, it does not, by itself, provide the credential phishing prevention functionality. The question specifically asks for the agent to "prevent credential phishing," which requires the add-on package.

Reference and Key Concepts for the PCNSE Exam:
Feature Name:
Remember the name Credential Theft Protection. It is a key feature tied to the User-ID agent.
Deployment Order: To deploy this, you must:
First, install the core User-ID agent (UaInstall-*.msi).
Second, install the Credential Theft Add-on (UaCredInstall-*.msi) on the same systems.
Firewall Configuration:
Simply installing the agent is not enough. You must also configure the feature on the firewall under Device > User Identification > Credential Theft Prevention by adding allowed domains and creating a security policy to block credential theft.
Documentation:
The official Palo Alto Networks documentation always refers to the add-on installer as the "Credential Theft Prevention component" or the UaCredInstall package.




Question # 5

An engineer is designing a deployment of multi-vsys firewalls. What must be taken into consideration when designing the device group structure?
A. Only one vsys or one firewall can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall can have each vsys in a different device group.
B. Multiple vsys and firewalls can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall can have each vsys in a different device group.
C. Only one vsys or one firewall can be assigned to a device group, except for a multi-vsys firewall, which must have all its vsys in a single device group.
D. Multiple vsys and firewalls can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall must have all its vsys in a single device group.


B. Multiple vsys and firewalls can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall can have each vsys in a different device group.
Explanation:

Key Concept: Device Groups in Panorama
Device Groups in Panorama are used to manage policies and objects (security rules, NAT, address objects, etc.) across multiple firewalls.
In multi-vsys (virtual system) firewalls, each vsys is treated like a separate firewall from a Panorama perspective.
That means Panorama can assign different vsys to different device groups.

❌ Eliminating Wrong Answers
A. Only one vsys or one firewall can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall can have each vsys in a different device group.
→ Wrong. A device group can manage multiple firewalls and multiple vsys, not just one.
C. Only one vsys or one firewall can be assigned to a device group, except for a multi-vsys firewall, which must have all its vsys in a single device group.
→ Wrong. Multi-vsys firewalls do not require all vsys to be in the same device group.
D. Multiple vsys and firewalls can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall must have all its vsys in a single device group.
→ Wrong. "Must" is the trap. PAN-OS allows flexibility — each vsys can go to a different device group.

✅ Correct Answer
B. Multiple vsys and firewalls can be assigned to a device group, and a multi-vsys firewall can have each vsys in a different device group.

📖 Reference (Official Docs)
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Panorama Admin Guide: Device Groups




Question # 6

Which statement about High Availability timer settings is true?
A. Use the Critical timer for faster failover timer settings.
B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings
C. Use the Moderate timer for typical failover timer settings
D. Use the Recommended timer for faster failover timer settings.


B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings
Explanation:
Palo Alto Networks firewalls use timers to monitor the health of the HA peers and trigger a failover if a peer is detected as failed. These timers are categorized into three predefined sets:

Recommended:
This is the default timer setting. It provides a balance between detecting failures and avoiding false positives caused by temporary network issues. This is the setting you would use for a typical, stable network environment.
Aggressive:
This setting uses the shortest possible timer values. It is designed to provide the fastest possible failover detection. You would use this in environments where downtime is extremely critical and you need to fail over as quickly as possible, even at the risk of a false failover from a minor network fluctuation.
Critical:
This setting uses a failover threshold that is even more stringent than the Aggressive setting. The timer values are so small that they are only applicable in very specific, high-performance environments and can be prone to false positives if not used carefully.
Moderate:
There is no pre-defined "Moderate" timer setting in the Palo Alto Networks HA configuration. The available options are Recommended, Aggressive, and Critical.

Analysis of the Options
A. Use the Critical timer for faster failover timer settings:
While the Critical timer is fast, the Aggressive timer is the most commonly recommended choice for "faster failover" in a typical setup. The Critical timer is a more specialized, extreme setting.
B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings:
This is the correct statement. The Aggressive timer is specifically designed for environments that require faster failover detection than the default "Recommended" setting.
C. Use the Moderate timer for typical failover timer settings:
This is incorrect. There is no "Moderate" timer. The "Recommended" timer is the one used for typical settings.
D. Use the Recommended timer for faster failover timer settings:
This is incorrect. The Recommended timer is the default and is designed for normal operations, not for fast failover. The Aggressive and Critical timers are the options for faster failover




Question # 7

Which sessions does Packet Buffer Protection apply to when used on ingress zones to protect against single-session DoS attacks?
A. New sessions and is global
B. New sessions and is not global
C. Existing sessions and is not global
D. Existing sessions and is global


B. New sessions and is not global
Explanation:
Packet Buffer Protection (PBP) is designed to protect the firewall from single-session DoS attacks that can exhaust packet buffers (for example, floods of small packets in a single session).
PBP applies only to new sessions entering through the ingress zone where it is enabled.
It is not global; instead, it must be configured on a per-zone basis.
If a session exceeds configured thresholds (e.g., packet rate, buffer consumption), the firewall can take protective actions such as dropping packets or terminating the session before it consumes too many resources.

❌ Why other options are incorrect:
A. New sessions and is global
→ Wrong, because PBP is zone-specific, not global.
C. Existing sessions and is not global
→ Wrong, PBP does not retroactively apply to sessions that are already established.
D. Existing sessions and is global
→ Wrong on both counts: not applied to existing sessions, and not global.

📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks, Packet Buffer Protection Overview
“Packet Buffer Protection applies to new sessions in the ingress zone where it is enabled and is not a global setting.”



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.