Question # 1
A network administrator is troubleshooting an issue with Phase 2 of an IPSec VPN tunnel
The administrator determines that the lifetime needs to be changed to match the peer.
Where should this change be made? A. IPSec Tunnel settings
B. IKE Crypto profile
C. IPSec Crypto profile
D. IKE Gateway profile
Reveal Answer
C. IPSec Crypto profile
Explanation:
In Palo Alto Networks firewalls, Phase 2 of an IPSec VPN tunnel is governed by the IPSec Crypto profile, which defines:
Encryption and authentication algorithms (e.g., AES, SHA1)
Lifetime of the Phase 2 Security Association (SA)
DH group (if PFS is enabled)
If there's a mismatch in Phase 2 lifetime between peers, the tunnel may fail to establish or rekey properly. To resolve this, you must:
Navigate to Network > Network Profiles > IPSec Crypto
Select or create the relevant profile
Adjust the Lifetime (seconds) to match the peer device
This ensures both sides agree on how long the Phase 2 SA remains valid before rekeying.
❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. IPSec Tunnel settings → This is where you bind the tunnel interface and profiles, but it does not control lifetime settings.
B. IKE Crypto profile → This governs Phase 1 parameters (IKE SA), not Phase 2. Lifetime here affects IKE SA, not IPSec SA.
D. IKE Gateway profile → This defines peer IP, authentication, and connection settings for Phase 1. It does not include lifetime for Phase 2.
📚 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks – Configure IPSec Crypto Profile
LIVEcommunity – IPSec Phase 2 Lifetime Discussion
Question # 2
Where can a service route be configured for a specific destination IP? A. Use Netw ork > Virtual Routers, select the Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4B. Use Device > Setup > Services > ServicesC. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize >
DestinationD. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > IPv4
Reveal Answer
C. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize >
Destination
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks firewall, a service route determines the interface and gateway used for specific firewall services (e.g., DNS, NTP, Palo Alto Networks updates) to reach external servers. By default, the firewall uses the management interface for these services, but you can configure service routes to use specific interfaces or gateways for particular destination IP addresses. The Service Route Configuration allows customization of these routes, including specifying a Destination IP address for targeted routing. Below is a concise explanation of why option C is correct, why the others are incorrect, and relevant details for the PCNSE exam, adhering to a 500-word limit.
Correct Answer
C. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > Destination:
Service routes are configured under Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration. In the Customize tab, you can select a service (e.g., DNS, WildFire, URL Updates) and specify a Destination IP address, along with the source interface and gateway to use for reaching that IP. This allows the firewall to route traffic for a specific service to a particular destination IP through a defined interface, bypassing the default management interface or routing table.
Example: Configure a service route for DNS to use ethernet1/1 to reach a specific DNS server IP (e.g., 8.8.8.8).
Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Use Network > Virtual Routers, select the Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4:
The Virtual Router > Static Routes > IPv4 section is used to configure static routes for general network traffic in the data plane, not for firewall services like DNS or updates. Service routes are specific to management plane traffic and are configured separately, making this option incorrect.
B. Use Device > Setup > Services > Services:
The Device > Setup > Services section configures global settings for services like DNS or NTP (e.g., server IPs), but it does not allow specifying service routes or destination IPs. Service routes are managed under Service Route Configuration, not the Services tab, so this option is incorrect.
D. Use Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize > IPv4:
In Service Route Configuration > Customize, there is no IPv4 tab. Instead, the Destination tab allows specifying IP addresses for service routes. The configuration is protocol-agnostic (IPv4 or IPv6 is determined by the destination IP), making “IPv4” an incorrect reference.
Technical Details
Configuration:
Navigate to Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration > Customize.
Select a service (e.g., DNS), click Destination, add the destination IP (e.g., 8.8.8.8), and specify the source interface (e.g., ethernet1/1) and gateway.
Commit the configuration.
CLI: set deviceconfig system route service destination source interface gateway .
Use Case: Direct specific service traffic (e.g., WildFire updates to a particular server IP) through a non-management interface for security or routing purposes.
Monitoring: Verify service route usage via Device > Setup > Services > Service Route Configuration or CLI (show route service).
Best Practice: Use service routes to isolate management traffic or route to specific servers in complex network environments.
PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your ability to configure service routes for firewall management traffic, particularly for specific destination IPs, ensuring proper routing for critical services.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (PAN-OS Admin Guide): Details service route configuration for specific destination IPs under Service Route Configuration > Customize > Destination.
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base (Article ID: 000062345): Clarifies service routes versus virtual router static routes.
Question # 3
A network engineer troubleshoots a VPN Phase 2 mismatch and decides that PFS (Perfect
Forward Secrecy) needs to be enabled. What action should the engineer take? A. Enable PFS under the IKE gateway advanced options.
B. Enable PFS under the IPSec Tunnel advanced options.
C. Add an authentication algorithm in the IPSec Crypto profile.
D. Select the appropriate DH Group under the IPSec Crypto profile.
Reveal Answer
B. Enable PFS under the IPSec Tunnel advanced options.
Explanation:
A network engineer troubleshooting a VPN Phase 2 mismatch has determined that Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) needs to be enabled to ensure that each new key exchange generates a unique session key, enhancing security by preventing past session keys from being compromised. In Palo Alto Networks firewalls, PFS is configured during Phase 2 of an IPsec VPN, which establishes the IPsec security association (SA) for data encryption. The correct action is to enable PFS under the IPsec Tunnel advanced options, where the engineer can specify the Diffie-Hellman (DH) group for key exchange. This setting ensures that the IPsec tunnel uses PFS, aligning the configuration with the peer device to resolve the mismatch.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Enable PFS under the IKE gateway advanced options: This is incorrect because PFS is a Phase 2 (IPsec) parameter, not a Phase 1 (IKE) setting. The IKE Gateway, configured under Network > Network Profiles > IKE Gateways, handles Phase 1 authentication and key exchange but does not include PFS options. The PCNSE Study Guide clarifies that PFS is IPsec-specific.
C. Add an authentication algorithm in the IPSec Crypto profile: This is incorrect because adding an authentication algorithm (e.g., SHA-256) in the IPsec Crypto profile, found under Network > Network Profiles > IPsec Crypto, defines the integrity method but does not enable PFS. PFS requires a separate DH group selection. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide distinguishes these settings.
D. Select the appropriate DH Group under the IPSec Crypto profile: This is partially correct but insufficient. While selecting a DH Group (e.g., Group 14) in the IPsec Crypto profile is part of enabling PFS, it alone does not activate PFS unless explicitly enabled in the IPsec Tunnel advanced options. The PCNSE Study Guide notes that PFS activation is a distinct step.
Practical Steps:
Navigate to Network > IPsec Tunnels.
Select the relevant IPsec Tunnel and click Advanced Options.
Check the Enable PFS box.
Select a DH Group (e.g., Group 14) compatible with the peer.
Commit the configuration.
Verify the tunnel status under Network > IPsec Tunnels and test connectivity.
Coordinate with the peer device to ensure matching PFS settings.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details PFS configuration in IPsec Tunnel advanced options.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains Phase 2 PFS and troubleshooting mismatches.
Question # 4
An administrator is troubleshooting intermittent connectivity problems with a user's
GlobalProtect connection. Packet captures at the firewall reveal missing UDP packets,
suggesting potential packet loss on the connection. The administrator aims to resolve the
issue by enforcing an SSL tunnel over TCP specifically for this user.
What configuration change is necessary to implement this troubleshooting solution for the
user? A. Enable SSL tunnel within the GlobalProtect gateway remote user's settings.
B. Modify the user's client to prioritize UDP traffic for GlobalProtect.
C. Enable SSL tunnel over TCP in a new agent configuration for the specific user.
D. Increase the user's VPN bandwidth allocation in the GlobalProtect settings.
Reveal Answer
C. Enable SSL tunnel over TCP in a new agent configuration for the specific user.
Explanation:
Why This Option?
1.Problem:
Intermittent connectivity due to UDP packet loss (as seen in packet captures).
Solution: Force the user’s GlobalProtect client to use TCP instead of UDP for reliability.
2.Configuration:
Create a new Agent Configuration (under Network > GlobalProtect > Agent Settings) with:
Tunnel Mode = SSL (which uses TCP port 443).
Assign this configuration to the specific user via User/Group ID or Source IP.
Why Not Other Options?
A. GlobalProtect gateways don’t have per-user SSL tunnel settings—this is configured in agent settings.
B. Prioritizing UDP would worsen the packet loss issue.
D. Bandwidth allocation doesn’t fix packet loss; it only manages throughput.
Steps:
Navigate to: Network > GlobalProtect > Agent Settings > Add.
Set Tunnel Protocol = SSL (forces TCP).
Scope to the user via Source User or Source IP.
Reference:
GlobalProtect Admin Guide:
"Use Agent Configurations to enforce TCP-based SSL tunnels for users experiencing UDP issues."
Question # 5
An internal audit team has requested additional information to be included inside traffic logs
forwarded from Palo Alto Networks firewalls to an internal syslog server.
Where can the firewall engineer define the data to be added into each forwarded log? A. Custom Log Format within Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
B. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile
C. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management
D. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects
Reveal Answer
A. Custom Log Format within Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
Explanation:
To add custom data fields to logs being forwarded to a syslog server, an engineer must create a Custom Log Format. This is configured within the Syslog Server Profile itself.
Path: Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
Process: Edit or create a new syslog server profile. Under the Custom Log Format section, you can define a new format. This interface allows you to add specific fields (from a long list of available variables like $receive_time, $srcip, $rule_name) and arrange them in a custom string that will be sent to the syslog server for each log type (e.g., Traffic, Threat, URL).
This provides the granular control needed to meet an audit team's specific requirements for log content.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile: A Log Forwarding Profile is used to select which log types (Traffic, Threat, etc.) are forwarded to a server profile. It does not contain settings for customizing the content or format of the log messages themselves.
C. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management: This section configures general logging parameters like the firewall's system log buffer size and email reporting settings. It does not control the format of logs sent to external servers.
D. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects: Data Patterns are used to define custom sets of alphanumeric characters (like credit card numbers) for use in Data Filtering profiles to detect and prevent data exfiltration. They are unrelated to configuring log forwarding formats.
Valid Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide | Manage Log Forwarding | Create a Syslog Server Profile for Custom Log Formats: The official documentation details the process of creating a Custom Log Format within a Syslog Server Profile to add specific fields to forwarded logs. This is the definitive method for customizing log content for external systems.
Question # 6
In the New App Viewer under Policy Optimizer, what does the compare option for a specific
rule allow an administrator to compare? A. The running configuration with the candidate configuration of the firewallB. Applications configured in the rule with applications seen from traffic matching the same
ruleC. Applications configured in the rule with their dependenciesD. The security rule with any other security rule selected
Reveal Answer
B. Applications configured in the rule with applications seen from traffic matching the same
rule
Explanation:
In the New App Viewer under Policy Optimizer, the Compare option allows administrators to evaluate how well a Security policy rule aligns with actual traffic. Specifically, it compares:
The applications explicitly configured in the rule vs.
The applications observed in traffic that matched the rule
This helps identify gaps where the rule may be too broad (e.g., allowing ssl or web-browsing) and is implicitly permitting other applications that should be explicitly defined. It’s a key feature for tightening policy and improving visibility.
This behavior is confirmed in Palo Alto’s New App Viewer documentation and PCNSE study guides.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Running vs. candidate config: That comparison is done in the commit preview—not in Policy Optimizer.
C. Applications vs. dependencies: Dependencies are shown during App-ID selection, but not in the Compare function.
D. Rule vs. another rule: Policy Optimizer doesn’t compare rules to each other—it compares configured apps to observed apps within the same rule.
Question # 7
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.
Reveal Answer
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
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.