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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.
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Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

Which configuration change will improve network reliability and ensure minimal disruption during tunnel failures?
A. Set up high availability (HA) and increase the IPsec rekey interval to reduce the likelihood of tunnel disruptions
B. Set up a backup tunnel and reduce the tunnel monitoring interval and threshold to detect failures quickly
C. Set up high availability (HA) and disable tunnel monitoring to prevent unnecessary failovers due to temporary connectivity issues
D. Set up a backup tunnel and change the tunnel monitoring profile from "Wait Recover" to "Fail Over"


B. Set up a backup tunnel and reduce the tunnel monitoring interval and threshold to detect failures quickly
Explanation:
When designing IPsec VPNs, the key is to ensure network reliability and minimal disruption if a tunnel fails. Palo Alto firewalls provide tunnel monitoring and the ability to configure backup tunnels for redundancy.

✅ Why Option B is Correct
Backup tunnel
→ provides a secondary path in case the primary tunnel goes down.
Reducing monitoring interval & threshold
→ failure detection happens faster, allowing automatic failover with minimal downtime.
This combination ensures high availability for VPN traffic without relying solely on HA or waiting for long detection cycles.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Set up HA and increase the IPsec rekey interval
HA alone does not address tunnel path failures between peers.
Increasing rekey interval reduces overhead but does not improve failover speed.
C. Set up HA and disable tunnel monitoring
Disabling monitoring prevents detection of tunnel failures.
This could leave traffic black-holed until manual intervention.
D. Set up a backup tunnel and change monitoring profile to "Wait Recover"
→ "Fail Over" "Fail Over" mode does fail traffic over, but by itself it doesn’t improve detection speed.
Without tuning monitoring interval/threshold, failover may still be slow.

📖 Reference
Palo Alto Networks Docs:
Set Up Tunnel Monitoring
“To improve reliability, configure a backup tunnel and adjust monitoring timers to detect and fail over quickly.”




Question # 2

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 # 3

A security engineer needs firewall management access on a trusted interface. Which three settings are required on an SSL/TLS Service Profile to provide secure Web UI authentication? (Choose three.)
A. Minimum TLS version
B. Certificate
C. Encryption Algorithm
D. Maximum TLS version
E. Authentication Algorithm


A. Minimum TLS version
B. Certificate
D. Maximum TLS version
Explanation:
To enable secure Web UI access on a Palo Alto Networks firewall via a trusted interface, the administrator must configure an SSL/TLS Service Profile with the following key settings:

Certificate
This is the server certificate used to authenticate the firewall to the browser.
It must be valid and trusted by client systems to avoid certificate warnings.
You can import a third-party certificate or generate one on the firewall.

Minimum TLS Version
Defines the lowest TLS protocol version allowed for secure connections.
Recommended to set this to TLS 1.2 or higher to avoid weak protocols.

Maximum TLS Version
Defines the highest TLS protocol version supported.
For management access, TLS 1.3 is supported and preferred for stronger security.
These three settings ensure that the Web UI uses a trusted certificate and secure protocol versions, which are essential for encrypted management access.

❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
C. Encryption Algorithm
→ Not directly configurable in the SSL/TLS Service Profile. Cipher suites are automatically selected based on the TLS versions.
E. Authentication Algorithm
→ Not a setting in SSL/TLS Service Profiles. Authentication is handled separately via admin credentials or certificate-based auth.

References:
Configure an SSL/TLS Service Profile – Palo Alto Networks
Secure Web-GUI Access Using Certificates – Knowledge Base




Question # 4

A network security administrator wants to inspect HTTPS traffic from users as it egresses through a firewall to the Internet/Untrust zone from trusted network zones.
The security admin wishes to ensure that if users are presented with invalid or untrusted security certificates, the user will see an untrusted certificate warning.
What is the best choice for an SSL Forward Untrust certificate?
A. A web server certificate signed by the organization's PKI
B. A self-signed certificate generated on the firewall
C. A subordinate Certificate Authority certificate signed by the organization's PKI
D. A web server certificate signed by an external Certificate Authority


B. A self-signed certificate generated on the firewall
Explanation:
When you configure SSL Forward Proxy on a Palo Alto firewall, two certificates are needed:
Forward Trust Certificate
Used when the firewall proxies trusted server certificates.
The firewall re-signs the original trusted site’s certificate with this certificate so the client accepts it.
Typically issued by the organization’s internal PKI or a trusted subordinate CA.
Forward Untrust Certificate
Used when the firewall intercepts traffic to a site with an untrusted or invalid certificate.
The firewall deliberately presents an untrusted cert to the user so their browser displays a warning (e.g., expired, self-signed, revoked).
This certificate must not chain to a trusted root — otherwise the user would not see the warning.
Best practice is to use a self-signed certificate generated on the firewall.

❌ Why the Other Options Are Wrong
A. A web server certificate signed by the organization’s PKI
→ Wrong. If signed by a trusted PKI, the browser will trust it and not show a warning. That defeats the purpose.
C. A subordinate Certificate Authority certificate signed by the organization’s PKI
→ Wrong. Again, chaining to a trusted PKI means the browser will trust the certificate, hiding untrusted certificate issues.
D. A web server certificate signed by an external Certificate Authority
→ Wrong. Same reason — it would be trusted by default, preventing the user from being warned.
Only B ensures users get the intended untrusted certificate warning.

📘 Reference
From Palo Alto Networks Documentation:
“For the Forward Untrust certificate, use a self-signed CA certificate generated on the firewall. This ensures that the client receives an untrusted certificate warning when the original server certificate is untrusted.”




Question # 5

A firewall administrator is changing a packet capture filter to troubleshoot a specific traffic flow Upon opening the newly created packet capture, the administrator still sees traffic for the previous fitter What can the administrator do to limit the captured traffic to the newly configured filter?
A. Command line > debug dataplane packet-diag clear filter-marked-session all
B. In the GLH under Monitor > Packet Capture > Manage Filters under Ingress Interface select an interface
C. Command line> debug dataplane packet-diag clear filter all
D. In the GUI under Monitor > Packet Capture > Manage Filters under the Non-IP field, select "exclude"


C. Command line> debug dataplane packet-diag clear filter all
Explanation:
When you apply a new packet capture filter, the firewall may still continue capturing traffic matching the old filter, because the previously configured filter is still cached in the dataplane.
To make sure only the new filter applies, you must clear the old filter configuration before starting a new capture.

The CLI command is:
> debug dataplane packet-diag clear filter all
This ensures that all previous filter conditions are removed, so the next packet capture will only use the newly configured filter.

❌ Why the other options are wrong:
A. debug dataplane packet-diag clear filter-marked-session all
This clears session-based debug filters, not the packet capture filter. Different purpose.
B. GUI under Monitor > Packet Capture > Manage Filters > Ingress Interface
Selecting an interface narrows the capture scope, but it does not clear the old filter, so stale matches may still show up.
D. GUI under Non-IP field, select "exclude"
This only filters out non-IP traffic, not the old filter set. Doesn’t solve the stale filter issue.

📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Use Packet Capture:




Question # 6

To ensure that a Security policy has the highest priority, how should an administrator configure a Security policy in the device group hierarchy?
A. Add the policy to the target device group and apply a master device to the device group.
B. Reference the targeted device's templates in the target device group.
C. Clone the security policy and add it to the other device groups.
D. Add the policy in the shared device group as a pre-rule


D. Add the policy in the shared device group as a pre-rule
Explanation:
In Palo Alto Networks Panorama device group hierarchy, security policy precedence is determined by two things:

1.Rule location (pre-rule vs post-rule vs local rules):
Pre-rules (defined in Panorama) are evaluated before any local device rules.
Post-rules (defined in Panorama) are evaluated after all local device rules.
Local rules (on the firewall itself or pushed to the device group) sit in between pre- and post-rules.

🔑 So, Pre-rules always have the highest priority.
2.Device group hierarchy (shared vs child device group):
Policies created in the Shared device group are inherited by all child device groups.
Placing the policy in the Shared device group as a pre-rule ensures it applies everywhere, and always comes first.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Add the policy to the target device group and apply a master device to the device group.
❌ Wrong. Adding it to a device group doesn’t guarantee highest priority. It will still be evaluated in the middle (local rules). The “master device” concept is for template settings, not for controlling policy priority.

B. Reference the targeted device's templates in the target device group.
❌ Wrong. Templates control network and device configuration (interfaces, zones, routing, etc.), not security rule priority.

C. Clone the security policy and add it to the other device groups.
❌ Wrong. Cloning distributes the policy, but it still won’t guarantee the highest priority unless it’s placed as a pre-rule. It also makes management harder (duplicate configs).

D. Add the policy in the shared device group as a pre-rule.
✅ Correct. This guarantees it applies to all firewalls first, before local rules. This is the best practice when a global policy must take precedence.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Policy Rulebase Precedence
Palo Alto Networks: Shared, Pre, and Post Rules in Panorama




Question # 7

A remote administrator needs access to the firewall on an untrust interface. Which three options would you configure on an interface Management profile to secure management access? (Choose three)
A. HTTPS
B. SSH
C. Permitted IP Addresses
D. HTTP
E. User-IO


A. HTTPS
B. SSH
C. Permitted IP Addresses
Explanation:
When allowing management access on an external-facing interface (like untrust), it is critical to limit the exposure to reduce the attack surface. The Interface Management Profile is the primary tool for this, controlling how and from where the firewall can be managed.

A. HTTPS & B. SSH:
These are the secure protocols you would enable to allow the remote administrator to actually access the firewall's WebUI (HTTPS) and Command Line Interface (SSH). You should disable insecure protocols like HTTP and Telnet.

C. Permitted IP Addresses:
This is the most crucial security control. Instead of allowing management access from any IP address on the internet, this setting restricts access to only the specific, known IP address (or range) from which the administrator will be connecting. This dramatically reduces the attack surface, preventing random scanners and attackers from even reaching the login prompts for HTTPS or SSH.

Why the other options are incorrect:
D. HTTP:
This is an insecure protocol that transmits credentials and data in plaintext. It should never be enabled for management access, especially on an untrust interface. Enabling HTTP would be a severe security misconfiguration.

E. User-IO:
This service is related to the firewall's physical console port access. It is used for out-of-band management when you are physically connected to the device with a keyboard and monitor. It is completely irrelevant for securing remote network-based management access over the untrust interface.

Best Practices:

Always disable HTTP and Ping on untrust interfaces.
Use certificate-based authentication for HTTPS/SSH if possible.

Reference:

Palo Alto Interface Management Profile Docs



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.