Question # 1
Which Panorama feature protects logs against data loss if a Panorama server fails? A. Panorama HA automatically ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside the HA
Cluster.B. Panorama Collector Group with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a
server fails inside the Collector Group.C. Panorama HA with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails inside
the HA Cluster.D. Panorama Collector Group automatically ensures that no logs are lost if a server fails
inside the Collector Group.
Reveal Answer
B. Panorama Collector Group with Log Redundancy ensures that no logs are lost if a
server fails inside the Collector Group.
Explanation:
1.Panorama Logging Options
Firewalls can send logs to Panorama for centralized logging.
To prevent log loss, Panorama supports Collector Groups — multiple Panorama log collectors working together.
2.Log Redundancy
If Log Redundancy is enabled on a Collector Group:
Each log is written to two collectors within the group.
If one collector fails, the other still has the log, ensuring no log loss.
3.Why Not the Other Options?
A. Panorama HA automatically ensures no log loss ❌
HA ensures management plane redundancy, but does not replicate logs between peers unless log redundancy is configured in a collector group.
C. Panorama HA with Log Redundancy ❌
Misleading: log redundancy is a collector group feature, not HA itself.
D. Panorama Collector Group automatically ensures no log loss ❌
Incorrect — redundancy is not automatic, you must explicitly enable Log Redundancy in the collector group.
Reference (Official Docs):
Palo Alto Networks — Collector Groups
🔗 Panorama Admin Guide – Collector Groups
“To prevent log loss, enable Log Redundancy in a Collector Group so that each log is forwarded to two log collectors in the group.”
Question # 2
A firewall administrator has confirm reports of a website is not displaying as expected, and
wants to ensure that decryption is not causing the issue. Which three methods can the
administrator use to determine if decryption is causing the website to fail? (Choose three.) A. Move the policy with action decrypt to the top of the decryption policy rulebase.B. Temporarily disable SSL decryption for all websites to troubleshoot the issue.C. Create a policy-based “No Decrypt” rule in the decryption policy to exclude specific
traffic from decryptionD. Investigate decryption logs of the specific traffic to determine reasons for failure.E. Disable SSL handshake logging
Reveal Answer
B. Temporarily disable SSL decryption for all websites to troubleshoot the issue.C. Create a policy-based “No Decrypt” rule in the decryption policy to exclude specific
traffic from decryptionD. Investigate decryption logs of the specific traffic to determine reasons for failure.
Explanation:
To determine if SSL decryption is causing a website failure, the administrator must test whether the issue persists when decryption is bypassed or disabled for that traffic, and analyze decryption-specific logs for errors.
B. Temporarily disable SSL decryption for all websites: This is a broad but effective test. If the website works immediately after globally disabling decryption (e.g., by changing rule actions to "No Decrypt"), it confirms decryption was the cause. This is a quick first step.
C. Create a policy-based “No Decrypt” rule: A more targeted approach. Creating a rule above the decrypt rule that matches the specific website (e.g., by destination address or URL) and sets action to "No Decrypt" bypasses decryption for that site only. If the site works, decryption was the issue.
D. Investigate decryption logs: The decryption logs (Monitor > Logs > Decryption) provide detailed reasons for failure, such as unsupported cipher suites, certificate validation errors, or protocol mismatches. Filtering logs for the affected website can pinpoint the exact decryption-related failure.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Move the policy with action decrypt to the top: This does not help troubleshoot; it only ensures the rule is evaluated first. If the rule itself is causing the failure (e.g., due to a misconfigured profile), moving it up will not resolve the issue.
E. Disable SSL handshake logging: This would remove visibility into the decryption process, making it harder to diagnose the problem. Logs are critical for troubleshooting.
Reference:
PAN-OS decryption troubleshooting guidelines recommend using No Decrypt rules for testing and analyzing decryption logs to identify failures (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "SSL Decryption Troubleshooting" section). Temporarily disabling decryption is a common practice to isolate the issue.
Question # 3
An administrator is using Panorama to manage multiple firewalls. After upgrading all
devices to the latest PAN-OS software, the administrator enables log forwarding from the
firewalls to Panorama.
However, pre-existing logs from the firewalls are not appearing in Panorama.
Which action should be taken to enable the firewalls to send their pre-existing logs to
Panorama? A. Export the log database.B. Use the import option to pull logs.
C. Use the scp logdb export command.
D. Use the ACC to consolidate the logs.
Reveal Answer
C. Use the scp logdb export command.
Explanation:
When you configure log forwarding from firewalls to Panorama, only new logs generated after enabling the feature are forwarded.
Pre-existing logs already stored on the local firewall’s log database will not be automatically sent to Panorama.
To move old logs, you need to manually export them from the firewall log database and import them into Panorama .
The correct method is to run the scp logdb export command on the firewall, which securely copies the firewall’s log database to Panorama (or another SCP server for import).
Why not the others?
A. Export the log database → too vague; doesn’t specify the actual mechanism (SCP is required).
B. Use the import option to pull logs → Panorama cannot pull logs from firewalls; logs must be pushed/exported.
D. Use the ACC to consolidate the logs → ACC (Application Command Center) only summarizes existing logs; it cannot retrieve old logs from firewalls.
Question # 4
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
Reveal 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.
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 # 5
When creating a Policy-Based Forwarding (PBF) policy, which two components can be
used? (Choose two.) A. ScheduleB. Source DeviceC. Custom ApplicationD. Source Interface
Reveal Answer
A. ScheduleD. Source Interface
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks firewall, a Policy-Based Forwarding (PBF) policy is used to control how traffic is routed based on specific criteria, overriding the default routing table. PBF policies are configured under Policies > Policy Based Forwarding and allow administrators to define rules that direct traffic to specific interfaces, next hops, or virtual routers based on various match conditions. The question asks which components can be used in a PBF policy, with Schedule and Source Interface being valid options.
Correct Answers
A. Schedule:
A Schedule can be used in a PBF policy to specify when the policy is active (e.g., during business hours, specific days). This is configured in the General tab of the PBF policy under Schedule, where a predefined or custom schedule (created under Objects > Schedules) is selected. The schedule determines when the policy’s forwarding rules apply, allowing time-based traffic routing control.
Example: A PBF policy routes traffic to a backup link only during maintenance windows defined by a schedule.
D. Source Interface:
The Source Interface is a match condition in a PBF policy, specified in the Source tab. It defines the ingress interface (e.g., ethernet1/1) from which traffic must originate for the policy to apply. This allows granular control over which traffic is subject to the PBF rule based on the interface it enters.
Example: A PBF policy routes traffic entering via ethernet1/2 to a specific next-hop gateway.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect
B. Source Device:
Source Device is not a valid match condition in PBF policies. While PBF policies can use Source Address, Source Zone, or Source User, there is no “Source Device” field. Device-specific criteria are used in other contexts, like GlobalProtect HIP profiles, but not in PBF.
C. Custom Application:
While PBF policies can match traffic based on Applications (including custom applications defined under Objects > Applications), the question’s phrasing suggests distinct components. Custom applications are part of the Application match condition, but Schedule and Source Interface are more fundamental components of the policy structure itself, making this option less precise.
Technical Details
PBF Policy Configuration:
Navigate to Policies > Policy Based Forwarding, create a rule, and set:
Schedule in the General tab (e.g., select “business-hours”).
Source Interface in the Source tab (e.g., ethernet1/1).
Define forwarding actions (e.g., next-hop IP, egress interface) in the Forwarding tab.
CLI: set rulebase pbf rules source interface schedule .
Other Match Conditions: PBF supports Source Zone, Source Address, Source User, Destination Address, Service, and Application.
Monitoring: Verify PBF application via Monitor > Logs > Traffic or CLI (show running pbf-policy).
Best Practice: Use schedules for time-based routing and source interfaces for precise traffic control.
PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your ability to configure PBF policies for advanced traffic routing. Understanding valid components like Schedule and Source Interface ensures effective policy creation and troubleshooting.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (PAN-OS Admin Guide): Details PBF policy components, including Schedule and Source Interface.
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base (Article ID: 000052678): Explains PBF match conditions, confirming Source Interface and Schedule support.
Question # 6
A customer would like to support Apple Bonjour in their environment for ease of
configuration.
Which type of interface in needed on their PA-3200 Series firewall to enable Bonjour
Reflector in a segmented network? A. Virtual Wire interfaceB. Loopback interfaceC. Layer 3 interfaceD. Layer 2 interface
Reveal Answer
D. Layer 2 interface
Explanation:
Apple Bonjour relies on multicast traffic to discover services (e.g., printers, shared devices) within the same broadcast domain. The Bonjour Reflector feature on Palo Alto Networks firewalls must bridge these multicast packets between segmented networks. Layer 2 interfaces (specifically configured in Layer 2 or VLAN mode) operate at the data link layer, allowing them to forward broadcast/multicast traffic like Bonjour across different VLANs or segments without routing, which would break multicast discovery.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Virtual Wire interfaces do not process or forward multicast traffic; they pass traffic transparently without altering frames, making them incompatible with Bonjour Reflector.
B. Loopback interfaces are logical IP interfaces used for management or routing protocols, not for forwarding Layer 2 multicast traffic.
C. Layer 3 interfaces route traffic at the network layer, which terminates broadcast domains and does not forward multicast packets required for Bonjour.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks documentation specifies that Bonjour Reflector requires Layer 2 interfaces (e.g., VLAN or L2 subinterfaces) to forward multicast packets between segments (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, “Bonjour Reflector” section). The firewall acts as a multicast proxy, extending Bonjour announcements across VLANs without routing.
Question # 7
Which statement explains the difference between using the PAN-OS integrated User-ID agent and the standalone User-ID agent when using Active Directory for user-to-IP
mapping? A. The PAN-OS integrated User-ID agent must be a member of the Active Directory
domainB. The PAN-OS integrated User-ID agent consumes fewer resources on the NGFW’s
management CPUC. The standalone User-ID agent consumes fewer resources on the NGFW’s management
CPUD. The standalone User-ID agent must run directly on the domain controller server
Reveal Answer
C. The standalone User-ID agent consumes fewer resources on the NGFW’s management
CPU
Explanation:
The key difference between the integrated and standalone User-ID agents lies in where the processing occurs:
PAN-OS Integrated User-ID Agent: This runs directly on the firewall's management plane. It consumes CPU and memory resources on the firewall to monitor Active Directory (via WMI or NetAPI) and perform user-to-IP mapping.
Standalone User-ID Agent: This is deployed on a separate Windows server (which must be a domain member). It handles all monitoring of Active Directory and computation of user mappings, then forwards only the results to the firewall. This significantly reduces the processing load on the firewall's management CPU.
Thus, the standalone agent is preferred in large environments where minimizing firewall resource usage is critical.
Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Both agents must communicate with Active Directory, but neither needs to be a domain member. The standalone agent, however, must be a domain member to access domain APIs.
B. The integrated agent actually consumes more resources on the firewall's management CPU because it performs all processing locally.
D. The standalone agent does not need to run on a domain controller. It can run on any Windows server that is a domain member and has network access to domain controllers.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide: The "User-ID Agent Deployment" section compares integrated and standalone agents, noting that the standalone agent reduces firewall CPU usage.
PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 3: Security Policies and Profiles): Understanding User-ID deployment options and their impact on performance is essential for scalable identity-based policies.
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.