Question # 1
An administrator has configured a pair of firewalls using high availability in Active/Passive mode. Link and Path Monitoring is enabled with the Failure Condition set to "any." There is
one link group configured containing member interfaces ethernet1/1 and ethernet1/2 with a
Group Failure Condition set to "all."
Which HA state will the Active firewall go into if ethernet1/1 link goes down due to a
failure?' A. Active-Secondary
B. Non-functional
C. Passive
D. Active
Reveal Answer
D. Active
Explanation:
The firewall will remain in the Active state. This outcome is determined by the specific, hierarchical configuration of the Link and Path Monitoring settings:
1.Failure Condition "any" for the overall feature: This is the top-level setting. It means that the firewall will consider the monitoring to have failed if any of the configured link groups reports a failure.
2.Group Failure Condition "all" for the specific link group: This link group contains two member interfaces: ethernet1/1 and ethernet1/2. The "all" condition means that every member interface in this group must be down for the entire group to be considered failed.
3.Analysis of the failure: Only one interface (ethernet1/1) has failed. Since the group failure condition is "all," the link group itself is NOT considered failed. Because the link group is not failed, the overall Failure Condition ("any") is not met.
Therefore, the active firewall does not detect a failure condition from its monitoring and has no reason to relinquish its active state. It will continue operating as the active firewall.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Active-Secondary: This state is specific to Active/Active HA mode, not the Active/Passive mode described in the scenario.
B. Non-functional: This is not a standard HA state. A firewall in a non-functional state would be completely offline.
C. Passive: The firewall would only transition to Passive if it determined itself to be less healthy than its peer. Since the link monitoring did not trigger a failure condition (because only one of two "all" links is down), the active firewall has no reason to give up its active role.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide | High Availability | Link and Path Monitoring: The documentation explains the hierarchy of these settings. The overall failure condition is evaluated based on the status of the link groups. A link group's status is determined by its member interfaces based on its group failure condition ("any" or "all"). In this case, with group condition "all," the group only fails if all members are down.
Question # 2
A security team has enabled real-time WildFire signature lookup on all its firewalls. Which
additional action will further reduce the likelihood of newly discovered malware being
allowed through the firewalls? A. increase the frequency of the applications and threats dynamic updates.B. Increase the frequency of the antivirus dynamic updatesC. Enable the "Hold Mode" option in Objects > Security Profiles > AntivirusD. Enable the "Report Grayware Files" option in Device > Setup > WildFire.
Reveal Answer
C. Enable the "Hold Mode" option in Objects > Security Profiles > Antivirus
Explanation:
Enabling real-time WildFire signature lookup allows Palo Alto Networks firewalls to query the WildFire cloud for the latest verdicts on unknown files before allowing them through. However, this lookup happens in parallel with traffic flow—meaning the file may be delivered before the verdict is returned, potentially allowing malware through.
To further reduce the likelihood of newly discovered malware being allowed:
✅ Enable "Hold Mode" in Antivirus Profiles
This feature pauses file delivery until the WildFire cloud returns a verdict.
If the verdict is malicious, the firewall can block the file before it reaches the user.
This prevents patient zero scenarios where malware is delivered before detection.
You can configure this under:
Objects > Security Profiles > Antivirus
And globally under:
Device > Setup > Content-ID > Real-Time Signature Lookup > Enable Hold Mode
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Increase the frequency of applications and threats dynamic updates This helps with known threats, but not zero-day malware. Real-time lookup is already faster.
B. Increase the frequency of antivirus dynamic updates Antivirus updates are periodic and reactive. They don’t help with real-time detection.
D. Enable "Report Grayware Files" This improves visibility but doesn’t block malware. It’s a reporting feature, not a prevention mechanism.
🔗 Authoritative Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Hold Mode for WildFire Real-Time Signature Lookup
Question # 3
An administrator needs to assign a specific DNS server to an existing template variable.
Where would the administrator go to edit a template variable at the device level? A. "Managed Devices > Device Association"
B. PDF Export under "Panorama > Templates"
C. Variable CSV export under "Panorama > Templates"
D. Manage variables under "Panorama > Templates"
Reveal Answer
D. Manage variables under "Panorama > Templates"
Explanation:
An administrator needs to assign a specific DNS server to an existing template variable in a Palo Alto Networks Panorama deployment. Template variables allow centralized management of device-specific configurations (e.g., DNS servers, IP addresses) across multiple firewalls by substituting variables with values at the device level. To edit a template variable, the administrator must access the variable management interface within Panorama’s template configuration. The correct location is Panorama > Templates > Manage Variables, where variables defined in templates (e.g., {$dns_server}) can be edited or assigned specific values for individual devices or device groups. The Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide specifies that the Manage Variables option under the Templates tab is used to assign or modify variable values, making option D correct.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. "Managed Devices > Device Association": This section is used to associate firewalls with device groups and templates but does not provide an interface to edit template variables. The PCNSE Study Guide notes it is for device management, not variable configuration.
B. PDF Export under "Panorama > Templates": The PDF Export feature generates a report of the template configuration but is read-only and does not allow editing of variables. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide indicates it is for documentation, not modification.
C. Variable CSV export under "Panorama > Templates": The CSV export option allows downloading variable values for bulk editing outside Panorama, but it is for export, not direct editing within the interface. Changes must be imported back via CSV, which is less efficient than the Manage Variables interface. The PCNSE Study Guide highlights CSV for bulk updates, not real-time edits.
Practical Steps:
Navigate to Panorama > Templates.
Select the relevant template containing the variable (e.g., one with {$dns_server}).
Click Manage Variables (available at the template level).
Locate the existing variable (e.g., {$dns_server}) in the list.
Edit the value to assign the specific DNS server IP (e.g., 8.8.8.8) for the device.
Click OK, then Commit and Push to apply to the managed firewall.
Verify the change under Device > Setup > Services on the firewall.
Additional Considerations:
Ensure the variable is defined in the template (e.g., under Device > Setup > Services > DNS Server as {$dns_server}).
As of 12:30 PM PKT on Thursday, August 21, 2025, confirm the Panorama version (e.g., 11.1) supports this feature, which it does by default.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details template variable management under Panorama > Templates.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains editing variables for device-specific configurations.
Question # 4
A security engineer has configured a GlobalProtect portal agent with four gateways Which
GlobalProtect Gateway will users connect to based on the chart provided?A. SouthB. WestC. EastD. Central
Reveal Answer
C. East
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks GlobalProtect deployment, the portal agent determines which gateway users connect to based on a combination of priority and response time, following a specific selection process. The chart provides details for four gateways: East (Highest priority, 35 ms response time), South (High priority, 30 ms response time), West (Medium priority, 50 ms response time), and Central (Low priority, 20 ms response time). GlobalProtect uses a two-step selection process: it first considers the priority assigned to each gateway, and if multiple gateways share the same priority, it then evaluates the response time (lowest is preferred). The Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide outlines that the gateway with the highest priority is selected, and in case of a tie, the one with the lowest response time wins.
Priority Evaluation: The East gateway has the Highest priority, which takes precedence over South (High), West (Medium), and Central (Low). Since no other gateway matches the Highest priority, East is the initial candidate.
Response Time Consideration: Although response time is a tiebreaker when priorities are equal, it is irrelevant here because East’s priority is uniquely the highest. However, for completeness, East’s 35 ms is reasonable compared to others, but priority alone suffices.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. South: With a High priority and 30 ms response time, South is outranked by East’s Highest priority. Response time (30 ms) is better than East’s 35 ms, but priority trumps it.
B. West: Medium priority and 50 ms response time place West lower than East in both priority and response time, making it an unlikely choice.
D. Central: Low priority and 20 ms response time (the best response time) are insufficient due to the lowest priority ranking, which overrides the response time advantage.
GlobalProtect Gateway Selection Process:
The portal agent queries all configured gateways.
It ranks them by priority (Highest > High > Medium > Low).
If priorities tie, it selects the gateway with the lowest response time.
The agent connects to the top-ranked gateway unless it’s unreachable, then falls back to the next.
Given East’s Highest priority, users will connect to it regardless of response times. The PCNSE Study Guide reinforces that priority is the primary factor, with response time as a secondary metric.
Practical Steps:
Verify gateway settings under Network > GlobalProtect > Gateways.
Confirm East is set to Highest priority in the portal configuration (Network > GlobalProtect > Portals).
Monitor connections via Monitor > Logs > GlobalProtect.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details GlobalProtect gateway selection based on priority and response time.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains gateway prioritization in GlobalProtect.
Question # 5
An organization wants to begin decrypting guest and BYOD traffic.
Which NGFW feature can be used to identify guests and BYOD users, instruct them how to download and install the CA certificate, and clearly notify them that their traffic will be
decrypted? A. Authentication Portal
B. SSL Decryption profile
C. SSL decryption policy
D. comfort pages
Reveal Answer
A. Authentication Portal
Explanation:
To decrypt guest and BYOD traffic while ensuring users are informed, instructed to install the CA certificate, and notified about decryption, the best feature to use is the Authentication Portal.
The Authentication Portal allows the firewall to:
Intercept HTTP/HTTPS traffic from unauthenticated users
Redirect them to a customizable web page
Display instructions for installing the CA certificate
Clearly notify users that their traffic will be decrypted
This is especially useful for BYOD and guest networks, where users are not domain-joined and cannot receive certificates via group policy. The portal acts as an onboarding mechanism, ensuring users trust the firewall’s certificate before SSL Forward Proxy decryption begins.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. SSL Decryption Profile Controls how decrypted traffic is handled (e.g., certificate checks), but does not notify users or help with certificate installation.
C. SSL Decryption Policy Defines which traffic is decrypted, but does not provide user interaction or onboarding.
D. Comfort Pages These are block pages shown when access is denied due to policy. They do not instruct users on certificate installation or notify about decryption.
References:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Configure Authentication Portal
LIVEcommunity Discussion – Decrypt Guest Network Traffic
Question # 6
A network administrator is trying to prevent domain username and password submissions
to phishing sites on some allowed URL categories
Which set of steps does the administrator need to take in the URL Filtering profile to
prevent credential phishing on the firewall? A. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to
block Select the User credential Detection tab and select Use Domain Credential Filter
CommitB. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to
block Select the User credential Detection tab and select use IP User Mapping CommitC. Choose the URL categories on Site Access column and set action to block Click the
User credential Detection tab and select IP User Mapping CommitD. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to
block Select the URL filtering settings and enable Domain Credential Filter Commit
Reveal Answer
A. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to
block Select the User credential Detection tab and select Use Domain Credential Filter
Commit
Explanation:
A network administrator aims to prevent domain username and password submissions to phishing sites within allowed URL categories on a Palo Alto Networks firewall. The URL Filtering profile, configured under Objects > Security Profiles > URL Filtering, includes features to detect and block credential submissions to untrusted or phishing sites. The User Credential Submission column allows the administrator to select specific URL categories (e.g., "Phishing," "Malware") and set the action to "block" to prevent credential entry on those sites. The User Credential Detection tab enables the firewall to identify domain credentials using the Domain Credential Filter, which integrates with User-ID to monitor and block submissions of Active Directory credentials to unauthorized sites. This combination ensures protection while allowing legitimate traffic.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block, Select the User credential Detection tab and select use IP User Mapping, Commit: This is incorrect because IP User Mapping maps users to IPs but does not specifically detect or filter domain credentials. The Domain Credential Filter is required for credential-specific protection. The PCNSE Study Guide clarifies the distinction.
C. Choose the URL categories on Site Access column and set action to block, Click the User credential Detection tab and select IP User Mapping, Commit: This is incorrect because the Site Access column controls general access (allow/deny) to URL categories, not credential submission specifically. IP User Mapping is irrelevant here, and the correct column is User Credential Submission. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide specifies the correct column.
D. Choose the URL categories in the User Credential Submission column and set action to block, Select the URL filtering settings and enable Domain Credential Filter, Commit: This is incorrect because there is no URL Filtering Settings tab to enable the Domain Credential Filter; it is configured under the User Credential Detection tab. The PCNSE Study Guide confirms the correct tab.
Practical Steps:
Navigate to Objects > Security Profiles > URL Filtering.
Create or edit a URL Filtering profile.
In the User Credential Submission column, select the relevant URL categories (e.g., "Phishing") and set the action to "block".
Go to the User Credential Detection tab, check Use Domain Credential Filter.
Ensure User-ID is configured with an Active Directory connection under Device > User Identification.
Attach the profile to a Security policy under Policies > Security.
Commit the configuration.
Verify via Monitor > Threat Logs that credential submissions are blocked.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details URL Filtering for credential protection.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains credential submission settings.
Question # 7
A company has configured a URL Filtering profile with override action on their firewall.
Which two profiles are needed to complete the configuration? (Choose two) A. SSL/TLS ServiceB. HTTP ServerC. DecryptionD. Interface Management
Reveal Answer
A. SSL/TLS ServiceC. Decryption
Explanation:
To properly implement URL Filtering with override actions, the firewall must inspect encrypted (HTTPS) traffic. This requires:
A. SSL/TLS Service Profile
Defines which SSL/TLS versions and cipher suites are allowed.
Ensures the firewall can properly decrypt and inspect traffic.
C. Decryption Profile
Specifies decryption rules (e.g., forward trust, forward untrust).
Required for SSL decryption, which is necessary for URL Filtering to analyze HTTPS traffic.
Why the Others Are Incorrect:
B. HTTP Server Profile → Used for firewall management access (GUI/API), not URL Filtering.
D. Interface Management Profile → Controls management access to interfaces, unrelated to decryption.
Reference:
Palo Alto URL Filtering with Decryption
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.