Question # 1
A company uses GlobalProtect for its VPN and wants to allow access to users who have
only an endpoint solution installed. Which sequence of configuration steps will allow access
only for hosts that have antivirus or anti-spyware enabled? A. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes. *
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Portal
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source HIP
profile. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.B. Create Security Profiles for Antivirus and Anti-Spyware.
Create Security Profile Group that includes the Antivirus and Anti-Spyware profiles. Enable
GlobalProtect Portal Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that
matches source device object. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.C. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes.
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source device
object. Enable GlobalProtect Portal Agent for HIP Notification.D. Create Security Profiles for Antivirus and Anti-Spyware.
Create Security Profile Group that includes the Antivirus and Anti-Spyware profile. Enable
GlobalProtect Gateway Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that
has the Profile Setting. Profile Type selected to Group. Enable GlobalProtect Portal Agent
for HIP Notification.
Reveal Answer
A. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes. *
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Portal
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source HIP
profile. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.
Explanation:
To restrict GlobalProtect VPN access to endpoints with antivirus or anti-spyware installed, the administrator must use Host Information Profile (HIP) checks. The correct sequence involves:
1.Create a HIP Object
Navigate to Objects > GlobalProtect > HIP Objects
Enable Anti-Malware and set Real-Time Protection = Yes
This ensures only endpoints with active antivirus/anti-spyware are matched
2.Create a HIP Profile
Go to Objects > GlobalProtect > HIP Profiles
Reference the HIP Object created above
This profile defines the matching logic for compliant endpoints
3.Enable HIP Data Collection on the Portal Agent Config
Under Network > GlobalProtect > Portals > Agent > Data Collection
This allows the GlobalProtect client to send endpoint posture data
4.Enable HIP Notification on the Gateway Agent Config
Under Network > GlobalProtect > Gateways > Agent > HIP Notification
This ensures the gateway receives and processes HIP data
Create a Security Policy referencing the HIP Profile
5.Create a Security Policy referencing the HIP Profile
Use the Source HIP Profile match criteria to allow access only to compliant hosts
This workflow is validated in Palo Alto’s HIP Objects Anti-Malware documentation and the GlobalProtect Administrator’s Guide.
❌ Why other options are incorrect
B and D: These refer to Security Profiles (Antivirus, Anti-Spyware), which are used for threat prevention—not for endpoint posture checks. They don’t control access based on endpoint state.
C: Reverses the Portal and Gateway HIP configuration steps. HIP data collection must be enabled on the Portal, and notification must be enabled on the Gateway—not the other way around.
Question # 2
An administrator troubleshoots an issue that causes packet drops.
Which log type will help the engineer verify whether packet buffer protection was activated? A. Data FilteringB. ConfigurationC. ThreatD. Traffic
Reveal Answer
C. Threat
Explanation:
Packet buffer protection is a security feature designed to prevent single-session Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks that could overwhelm the firewall's resources. When this feature is activated, the firewall takes action against offending sessions by dropping packets or even blocking the source IP address. These actions are logged as security events.
Threat Logs: This is the correct location because the packet drops and session discards caused by packet buffer protection are classified as security-related events. The firewall generates specific Threat IDs (e.g., PBP Packet Drop or PBP Session Discarded) that are recorded in the Threat logs. This allows an administrator to specifically filter for these events to confirm that the protection mechanism has been triggered and is actively mitigating a potential attack.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Data Filtering: Data filtering logs are for events related to preventing sensitive data from leaving the network. This has no relation to packet buffer utilization.
B. Configuration: Configuration logs record changes made to the firewall's configuration by an administrator. While the initial setup of packet buffer protection would be in these logs, they do not show its activation during an attack.
D. Traffic: Traffic logs record information about network sessions (start, end, allow, deny, drop). While the packets are indeed being dropped, the reason for the drop (i.e., packet buffer protection) is not explicitly detailed in the standard traffic log. The specific security event is recorded in the Threat log.
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
Reveal Answer
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
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 firewallB. Configure the TAP interface for segment X on the firewall.C. Configure a new vsys for segment X on the firewallD. Configure vwire interfaces for segment X on the firewall
Reveal Answer
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 # 5
Which interface type should a firewall administrator configure as an upstream to the ingress
trusted interface when configuring transparent web proxy on a Palo Alto Networks firewall? A. TunnelB. EthernetC. VLAND. Lookback
Reveal Answer
C. VLAN
Explanation:
Configuring a transparent web proxy on a Palo Alto Networks firewall involves redirecting web traffic to an explicit proxy (like PAN-OS's built-in proxy) without the client's knowledge. The key to this setup is understanding the flow of traffic and the required interface roles.
1. Understanding Transparent Proxy Flow
In a typical transparent proxy deployment:
A client sends HTTP/S traffic to a destination web server.
A firewall rule redirects this traffic to the firewall's own proxy engine.
The proxy engine terminates the client connection, processes the request (including performing decryption, threat scanning, and URL filtering), and then initiates a new connection to the destination web server on behalf of the client.
For this new connection to the internet, the proxy needs an egress point.
2. The Role of the "Upstream" Interface
The upstream interface is the logical interface on the firewall that the proxy uses as the source interface for its new, outbound connection to the destination web server. It is the "egress" point for the proxy-originated traffic.
The proxy needs a source IP address for its connections. This IP is assigned to the upstream interface.
This upstream interface must be a Layer 3 interface with a valid IP address that can route to the internet.
3. Why VLAN is the Correct Choice
A VLAN interface is a Layer 3 virtual interface. It has an IP address and resides in a zone and a virtual router. This makes it perfectly suited to act as the upstream interface because:
It provides the necessary Layer 3 properties (IP address, routing).
It allows for logical separation of the proxy's management traffic from other data plane traffic.
It is a common and best practice to use a dedicated VLAN interface for this purpose.
4. Why the Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Tunnel
Incorrect. A tunnel interface (e.g., for IPsec or GRE) is used for encrypted VPN tunnels. It is not used as a general-purpose upstream interface for proxy traffic. The proxy's traffic to the web server should be routed normally, not through a specific tunnel, unless a very specific use case demands it.
B. Ethernet
Incorrect. A physical Ethernet interface can operate in two modes:
Layer 2 (Virtual Wire or Layer2): It has no IP address and cannot be used for routing, so it cannot be an upstream interface.
Layer 3: While a Layer 3 Ethernet interface could technically be used, it is not the best practice. You would be dedicating an entire physical port just for the proxy's upstream traffic. Using a VLAN sub-interface on a physical trunk port is a much more flexible and common approach.
D. Loopback
Incorrect. A loopback interface is a logical, always-up interface used for management purposes or for protocols that need a stable endpoint (like BGP router ID). While it has an IP address, it is not a routed interface in the sense of having a physical path out of the firewall. Traffic sourced from a loopback interface would likely be dropped because it lacks a clear egress path, making it unsuitable as an upstream interface for proxy traffic.
Reference and Key Concepts for the PCNSE Exam:
1.GUI Path: The upstream interface is configured within the explicit proxy settings.
Device > Server Profiles > HTTP/HTTPS Proxy > Edit your profile.
In the Transparent section, you will find the Upstream Interface dropdown. This is where you select your pre-configured VLAN interface.
2.Prerequisite: Before selecting it in the proxy profile, the VLAN interface must be created (Network > Interfaces > VLAN), assigned an IP address, placed in a zone, and added to the appropriate virtual router.
3.Traffic Flow: Remember the path: Client -> (Ingress Trusted Interface) -> Firewall Proxy -> (Upstream VLAN Interface) -> Internet -> Web Server.
4.Best Practice: Using a dedicated VLAN interface for the upstream role is the standard and recommended method, as it provides clear separation and simplifies troubleshooting.
Question # 6
Which two statements correctly describe Session 380280? (Choose two.) A. The session went through SSL decryption processing.
B. The session has ended with the end-reason unknown.
C. The application has been identified as web-browsing.
D. The session did not go through SSL decryption processing.
Reveal Answer
C. The application has been identified as web-browsing.
D. The session did not go through SSL decryption processing.
Explanation:
Analyzing the session details from the show session id 380280 output:
C. The application has been identified as web-browsing.
The output explicitly states: application : web-browsing. This confirms that App-ID successfully classified the traffic.
D. The session did not go through SSL decryption processing.
The output shows: session proxied : True. This indicates the session was processed by the firewall's proxy (e.g., for security profiles like Threat Prevention, URL Filtering).
However, there is no mention of decryption (e.g., no decrypted flag or SSL-specific fields). Crucially, the source and destination IPs in the s2c flow are different from the c2s flow, and NAT is applied (address/port translation : source), but this is unrelated to decryption.
If SSL decryption had occurred, the output would typically show details like the decryption policy, certificate information, or a decrypted marker. Its absence indicates the traffic was not decrypted.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. The session went through SSL decryption processing.: There is no evidence of decryption in the output. The proxied flag refers to L7 processing (e.g., security profiles), not specifically to decryption.
B. The session has ended with the end-reason unknown.: The output shows state : ACTIVE and time to live : 2 sec, meaning the session is still active and has not ended. The end-reason field is only relevant after a session closes.
Reference:
PAN-OS session diagnostics: The show session id command provides detailed session attributes. The absence of decryption-related fields (e.g., decryption policy, ssl-decrypt) indicates no decryption occurred (PAN-OS CLI Reference Guide). The application field confirms App-ID results.
Question # 7
An engineer is reviewing the following high availability (HA) settings to understand a recent
HAfailover event.
Which timer determines the frequency between packets sent to verify that the HA
functionality on the other HA firewall is operational? A. Monitor Fail Hold Up Time
B. Promotion Hold Time
C. Heartbeat Interval
D. Hello Interval
Reveal Answer
D. Hello Interval
Explanation:
In Palo Alto Networks High Availability (HA), hello packets are the primary mechanism for peers to communicate their state and liveness. The Hello Interval (default: 2000ms for Active/Passive, 4000ms for Active/Active) defines how often these unicast hello packets are sent. If a firewall does not receive hello packets from its peer within the expected timeframe (based on the HA timers), it will trigger a failover.
Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Monitor Fail Hold Up Time: This timer is related to path monitoring, not HA peer communication. It defines how long a firewall waits before declaring a monitored path failed.
B. Promotion Hold Time: This timer prevents a passive firewall from immediately becoming active after a failover, ensuring network stability. It is not related to the frequency of operational checks.
C. Heartbeat Interval: This is a common distractor. The Heartbeat Interval (default: 8000ms) defines how often the firewall sends heartbeat packets over the HA data link to synchronize sessions and state. However, the Hello Interval is specifically for the control-link packets that verify peer liveness.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide: The "High Availability" chapter explicitly distinguishes between the Hello Interval (for control-link keepalives) and the Heartbeat Interval (for data-link synchronization). The Hello Interval is directly responsible for verifying peer operational status.
PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 1: Architecture - High Availability): Understanding HA timers and their roles in failover conditions is a core requirement.
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.