Question # 1
A standalone firewall with local objects and policies needs to be migrated into Panorama.
What procedure should you use so Panorama is fully managing the firewall? A. Use the "import device configuration to Panorama" operation, commit to Panorama, then
"export or push device config bundle" to push the configuration.B. Use the "import Panorama configuration snapshot" operation, commit to Panorama,
then "export or push device config bundle" to push the configuration.C. Use the "import device configuration to Panorama" operation, commit to Panorama, then
perform a device-group commit push with "include device and network templates".D. Use the "import Panorama configuration snapshot" operation, commit to Panorama,
then perform a device-group commit push with "include device and network templates".
Reveal Answer
C. Use the "import device configuration to Panorama" operation, commit to Panorama, then
perform a device-group commit push with "include device and network templates".
Explanation:
To migrate a standalone firewall into Panorama management, the correct procedure involves importing its configuration and converting it into Panorama-managed objects (device groups and templates). Here's the step-by-step logic:
1: Import Device Configuration to Panorama
Use “Import device configuration to Panorama” to bring in the firewall’s local configuration.
This creates:
A device group for policies and objects.
A template for network and system settings.
📚 Reference: Palo Alto Networks – Panorama Admin Guide: Import a Firewall Configuration
2: Commit to Panorama
This saves the imported configuration into Panorama’s database.
No changes are pushed to the firewall yet.
3: Push Configuration to Firewall
Use “Commit to Device Group” and select “Include device and network templates”.
This pushes both:
Device group policies/objects
Template settings (interfaces, zones, etc.)
This step ensures the firewall is now fully managed by Panorama.
❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong:
A. Incorrect because “export or push device config bundle” is used for bootstrapping or initial provisioning — not for migrating an existing standalone firewall.
B & D. Incorrect because “import Panorama configuration snapshot” is used to restore Panorama’s own config — not to import a firewall’s config.
Question # 2
Following a review of firewall logs for traffic generated by malicious activity, how can an
administrator confirm that WildFire has identified a virus? A. By navigating to Monitor > Logs > WildFire Submissions, applying filter "(subtype eq
wildfire-virus)"B. By navigating to Monitor > Logs > Threat, applying filter "(subtype eq wildfire-virus)'C. By navigating to Monitor > Logs > Traffic, applying filter "(subtype eq virus)"D. By navigating to Monitor > Logs> Threat, applying filter "(subtype eq virus)"
Reveal Answer
A. By navigating to Monitor > Logs > WildFire Submissions, applying filter "(subtype eq
wildfire-virus)"
Explanation:
To confirm that WildFire has identified a virus, the administrator must check the WildFire Submissions log. This log specifically tracks files submitted to WildFire and their verdicts.
The filter (subtype eq wildfire-virus) targets entries where WildFire has classified a file as malware (virus).
Threat logs (options B and D) show broader threat activity but do not confirm WildFire verdicts.
Traffic logs (option C) do not contain WildFire verdicts at all.
📘 Reference:
WildFire Log Review – Palo Alto Networks
PCNSE WildFire Log Filter Guide
Question # 3
An engineer is monitoring an active/active high availability (HA) firewall pair.
Which HA firewall state describes the firewall that is currently processing traffic? A. InitialB. PassiveC. ActiveD. Active-primary
Reveal Answer
C. Active
Explanation:
1.HA Modes in PAN-OS
Active/Passive HA: One firewall is active (processes traffic), the other is passive (standby, syncing config/state).
Active/Active HA: Both firewalls are in an active state, and both process traffic simultaneously. They share session information and load-balance traffic.
2.HA States Defined
Initial → Temporary state during boot or HA setup; not passing traffic.
Passive → Standby mode (used only in Active/Passive). It never processes traffic.
Active → Firewall is actively processing traffic. This applies in both Active/Active and Active/Passive.
Active-primary → ⚠️ Not an official HA state. In Active/Active, roles like active-primary and active-secondary describe priority/preference for session ownership, but the HA state is still “Active.”
3.So in Active/Active Monitoring:
If you want to know which firewall(s) are processing traffic → look for state = Active.
“Active-primary” is not a state, but a designation for deterministic failover (device priority).
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks — HA States
🔗 PAN-OS Admin Guide – HA Firewall States
Question # 4
Given the following snippet of a WildFire submission log did the end-user get access to the
requested information and why or why not? A. Yes, because the action is set to alert
B. No, because this is an example from a defeated phishing attack
C. No, because the severity is high and the verdict is malicious.
D. Yes, because the action is set to allow.
Reveal Answer
D. Yes, because the action is set to allow.
Explanation:
In Palo Alto Networks WildFire submission logs, the action field determines whether the firewall allowed or blocked the traffic. Even if the verdict is malicious and the severity is high, the firewall will still permit the traffic if the action is set to allow—unless a security profile or policy explicitly blocks it.
From the log snippet:
Action: allow
Verdict: malicious
Severity: high
This means the firewall did not block the traffic, and the end-user was able to access the requested information. The WildFire verdict is used for visibility and potential automated response (e.g., future signature updates), but it does not retroactively block traffic unless configured to do so.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Yes, because the action is set to alert The alert action applies to the second log entry (URL type), not the malicious WildFire submission. It doesn’t block access.
B. No, because this is an example from a defeated phishing attack There's no indication this was a phishing attack. The verdict is malicious, not phishing.
C. No, because the severity is high and the verdict is malicious Severity and verdict alone do not block traffic. The action field governs access.
🔗 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks official documentation on WildFire Submission Logs
PCNSE Flashcard Source confirming correct answer
Question # 5
Review the information below. A firewall engineer creates a U-NAT rule to allow users in
the trust zone access to a server in the same zone by using an external,
public NAT IP for that server.
Given the rule below, what change should be made to make sure the NAT works as
expected? A. Change destination NAT zone to Trust_L3.B. Change destination translation to Dynamic IP (with session distribution) using firewall ethI/2 address.C. Change Source NAT zone to Untrust_L3.D. Add source Translation to translate original source IP to the firewall eth1/2 interface
translation.
Reveal Answer
A. Change destination NAT zone to Trust_L3.
Explanation:
This is a classic U-Turn NAT scenario, where internal users access an internal server using its public IP address. For this to work correctly, the NAT rule must reflect that both source and destination traffic are in the same zone — in this case, Trust_L3.
Why A is Correct:
The destination zone in the NAT rule must match the zone of the translated IP (i.e., the internal server).
Since the public IP is translated to 10.0.0.100, which resides in Trust_L3, the destination zone must be Trust_L3.
If you leave it as Untrust_L3, the firewall won’t match the NAT rule correctly, and the traffic will fail.
📚 Reference: Palo Alto Networks – U-Turn NAT Configuration
❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong:
B. Dynamic IP translation: Not relevant — this is a destination NAT scenario, not source NAT.
C. Source NAT zone to Untrust_L3: Incorrect — the source zone is Trust_L3 and should remain so.
D. Add source translation: Not required for U-Turn NAT unless there's a specific need to mask internal IPs.
Question # 6
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. HTTPSB. SSHC. Permitted IP AddressesD. HTTPE. User-IO
Reveal Answer
A. HTTPSB. SSHC. 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
Question # 7
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.
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.