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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

A company has recently migrated their branch office's PA-220S to a centralized Panorama. This Panorama manages a number of PA-7000 Series and PA-5200 Series devices All device group and template configuration is managed solely within Panorama. They notice that commit times have drastically increased for the PA-220S after the migration. What can they do to reduce commit times?
A. Disable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" in Panorama Settings.
B. Update the apps and threat version using device-deployment
C. Perform a device group push using the "merge with device candidate config" option
D. Use "export or push device config bundle" to ensure that the firewall is integrated with the Panorama config.


A. Disable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" in Panorama Settings.
Explanation:
By default, Panorama shares all objects (addresses, services, app groups, etc.) with all managed firewalls, even if they’re not used.
On small appliances (like PA-220), this leads to long commit times because the device has to process a very large object set — most of which it doesn’t need.
Disabling “Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices” tells Panorama to only push objects actually used in policy for that firewall, drastically reducing commit load/time.
This is a best practice when a Panorama manages both large chassis devices and small branch devices.

❌ Why the other options are wrong:
B. Update the apps and threat version using device-deployment
Good maintenance practice, but it has no impact on commit time.
C. Perform a device group push using “merge with device candidate config”
This just changes whether Panorama merges its config with the firewall’s candidate. It doesn’t optimize commit time.
D. Use “export or push device config bundle”
That’s for ensuring initial Panorama-to-firewall config sync, especially after RMA or Panorama migration. It won’t reduce ongoing commit times.

📖 Reference:
Palo Alto TechDocs – Panorama Commit Optimization:




Question # 2

Which Panorama mode should be used so that all logs are sent to. and only stored in. Cortex Data Lake?
A. Log Collector
B. Panorama
C. Legacy
D. Management Only


D. Management Only
Explanation:

Recall Panorama Deployment Modes
1.Panorama Mode
Full management + log collection.
Logs stored locally (Panorama / Dedicated Log Collectors).
2.Log Collector Mode
Panorama works only as a log collector.
Stores logs locally.
3.Legacy Mode
Pre–PAN-OS 8.0, combined mgmt + logging.
Deprecated.
4.Management Only Mode
Panorama manages devices (device-groups, templates, policies).
Does not store logs locally.
All logs can be forwarded to Cortex Data Lake (CDL).
✔ Exactly what the question requires.

Evaluate the options
A. Log Collector → Stores logs locally → ❌
B. Panorama → Stores logs locally → ❌
C. Legacy → Deprecated, still stores locally → ❌
D. Management Only → Sends logs only to Cortex Data Lake → ✅

Official Reference
Palo Alto Networks – Panorama Deployment Modes
“Use Management Only mode if you want Panorama to manage firewalls while all logs are forwarded to Cortex Data Lake, with no local log storage.”




Question # 3

Based on the graphic which statement accurately describes the output shown in the Server Monitoring panel?
A. The User-ID agent is connected to a domain controller labeled lab-client
B. The host lab-client has been found by a domain controller
C. The host lab-client has been found by the User-ID agent.
D. The User-ID aaent is connected to the firewall labeled lab-client


A. The User-ID agent is connected to a domain controller labeled lab-client
Explanation:
The Server Monitoring panel in the Palo Alto Networks firewall interface shows the status of servers being monitored by the User-ID agent. In the graphic:
The entry labeled lab-client is listed under the Server Monitoring section.
Its Type is Microsoft Active Directory, indicating it's a domain controller.
The Status is Connected, confirming that the User-ID agent is actively connected to this domain controller.
This means the firewall is successfully receiving user mapping information from the domain controller named lab-client.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. The host lab-client has been found by a domain controller Incorrect—lab-client is the domain controller, not a host discovered by one.
C. The host lab-client has been found by the User-ID agent Misleading—lab-client is not a host being discovered; it's a monitored server.
D. The User-ID agent is connected to the firewall labeled lab-client Incorrect—lab-client is a domain controller, not a firewall.

References:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Server Monitoring
Exam4Training – Server Monitoring Panel Interpretation




Question # 4

A root cause analysis investigation into a recent security incident reveals that several decryption rules have been disabled. The security team wants to generate email alerts when decryption rules are changed. How should email log forwarding be configured to achieve this goal?
A. With the relevant configuration log filter inside Device > Log Settings
B. With the relevant system log filter inside Objects > Log Forwarding
C. With the relevant system log filter inside Device > Log Settings
D. With the relevant configuration log filter inside Objects > Log Forwarding


A. With the relevant configuration log filter inside Device > Log Settings
Explanation:
To generate email alerts when decryption rules are changed, you need to monitor configuration logs, because changes to security policies—including decryption rules—are recorded as configuration events.

The correct place to configure this is:
Device > Log Settings
Under Configuration Logs, apply a filter that matches changes to decryption rules.
Set up email forwarding for those filtered logs.
This ensures that any modification, disabling, or deletion of decryption rules triggers an email alert to the security team.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. System log filter inside Objects > Log Forwarding System logs capture operational events, not configuration changes.
C. System log filter inside Device > Log Settings Again, system logs don’t track policy changes.
D. Configuration log filter inside Objects > Log Forwarding You must configure log forwarding for configuration logs under Device > Log Settings, not under Objects.

🔗 Authoritative Reference:
PUPUWEB: Configuring Email Alerts for Decryption Rule Changes




Question # 5

An internal audit team has requested additional information to be included inside traffic logs forwarded from Palo Alto Networks firewalls to an interal syslog server. Where can the firewall engineer define the data to be added into each forwarded log?
A. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects
B. Custom Log Format within Device Server Profiles> Syslog
C. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile
D. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management


B. Custom Log Format within Device Server Profiles> Syslog
Explanation:
The question asks where to define additional information to be included in each forwarded log. This is the exact purpose of a Custom Log Format.

Here’s the breakdown:
1.Location: The path is Device > Server Profiles > Syslog. Here, you create or edit a syslog server profile that defines where to send the logs.
2.Feature: Within each syslog server profile, there is a section called "Custom Log Format".
3.Function: This feature allows you to build a custom template for the log message that will be sent to the syslog server. You can add, remove, and rearrange the fields (variables) that are included in the log.
You can add fields that are not in the standard format, such as action, app-category, rule-name, src-vm-name, dst-vm-name, and many more.
This provides the flexibility to include the exact "additional information" requested by the audit team.

Steps to Configure:
Navigate to Device > Server Profiles > Syslog.
Edit an existing profile or create a new one.
Click the "Custom Log Format" toggle to enable it.
Use the drop-down menus to add the desired fields to the log format template.

Detailed Analysis of the Other Options:
A. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects
Why it's wrong: Data Patterns are used to define custom strings of data (like credit card numbers or employee IDs) for use in Data Filtering profiles to detect and prevent data exfiltration. They are not used to modify the structure or content of log messages sent to syslog.
C. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile
Why it's wrong: This is a distractor. There is no menu called "Objects > Log Forwarding Profile". Log forwarding profiles are server profiles created under Device > Server Profiles > Syslog. "Built-in Actions" is not a term associated with log formatting.
D. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management
Why it's wrong: This path (Device > Setup > Management) is where you configure fundamental logging parameters, such as:
The number of logs to store on the firewall.
The log export schedule.
The IP address of the Panorama management server.
It does not contain any settings for customizing the content or format of individual log messages forwarded to a syslog server.

Reference & Key Takeaway:
Core Concept: Understanding the difference between where to send logs (the server profile) and what to send (the log format). The Custom Log Format feature gives you granular control over the "what".
Use Case: This is essential for integration with third-party SIEM systems that may require a specific log format or need additional contextual fields for correlation and analysis.
Syntax: The custom format uses variables like $action, $rule, etc., to represent the data fields in the log message.




Question # 6

What is the best definition of the Heartbeat Interval?
A. The interval in milliseconds between hello packets
B. The frequency at which the HA peers check link or path availability
C. The frequency at which the HA peers exchange ping
D. The interval during which the firewall will remain active following a link monitor failure


A. The interval in milliseconds between hello packets
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks HA pair, the heartbeat is the mechanism used by peers to verify that the other firewall is alive. This is done by sending hello packets across the HA control link at a regular interval.
Heartbeat Interval → the time (in ms) between hello packets exchanged over the HA control link. Default is 1000 ms (1 second).
If the firewall does not receive hello packets within the Heartbeat Backup Timeout (default = 3x interval, i.e., 3 seconds), it assumes the peer has failed and triggers a failover.
So, the heartbeat interval is not about link monitoring, path monitoring, or pinging — it is strictly the frequency of hello packets sent between HA peers.

❌ Why the other options are wrong
B. The frequency at which the HA peers check link or path availability
→ That describes Link Monitoring / Path Monitoring, not the heartbeat.
C. The frequency at which the HA peers exchange ping
→ Heartbeats are hello packets, not ICMP pings.
D. The interval during which the firewall will remain active following a link monitor failure
→ That refers to Fail Hold Time, not heartbeat interval.

📘 Reference:
From Palo Alto Networks HA documentation:
“The heartbeat interval specifies the frequency at which hello messages are sent to verify the peer is alive. The default value is 1000 ms.”




Question # 7

During the implementation of SSL Forward Proxy decryption, an administrator imports the company's Enterprise Root CA and Intermediate CA certificates onto the firewall. The company's Root and Intermediate CA certificates are also distributed to trusted devices using Group Policy and GlobalProtect. Additional device certificates and/or Subordinate certificates requiring an Enterprise CA chain of trust are signed by the company's Intermediate CA. Which method should the administrator use when creating Forward Trust and Forward Untrust certificates on the firewall for use with decryption?
A. Generate a single subordinate CA certificate for both Forward Trust and Forward Untrust.
B. Generate a CA certificate for Forward Trust and a self-signed CA for Forward Untrust.
C. Generate a single self-signed CA certificate for Forward Trust and another for Forward Untrust
D. Generate two subordinate CA certificates, one for Forward Trust and one for Forward Untrust.


D. Generate two subordinate CA certificates, one for Forward Trust and one for Forward Untrust.
Explanation:
In SSL Forward Proxy decryption, the firewall acts as a man-in-the-middle proxy, re-signing server certificates for client inspection. To do this securely and flexibly, Palo Alto Networks recommends:

Creating two separate subordinate CA certificates:
One for Forward Trust: used to re-sign certificates from trusted external sites
One for Forward Untrust: used to re-sign certificates from untrusted or invalid sites (so clients receive a warning)
Since the company already uses an Enterprise Root CA and Intermediate CA, the best practice is to:
Generate two Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs) on the firewall
Have both signed by the Enterprise Intermediate CA Import them back and designate one as Forward Trust CA, and the other as Forward Untrust CA
This method ensures:
Full chain-of-trust alignment with enterprise PKI
Granular control over certificate revocation and trust behavior
Clear separation of trusted vs. untrusted traffic handling

❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Single subordinate CA for both roles
→ Violates best practice. You lose the ability to differentiate trusted vs. untrusted sites, and can't revoke one role independently.
B. CA for Trust, self-signed for Untrust
→ Inconsistent trust model. Both should be subordinate to the enterprise CA for uniform trust handling.
C. Two self-signed CAs
→ Not ideal in enterprise environments. Requires manual distribution and trust configuration on all endpoints, which is already handled via Group Policy and GlobalProtect.

📚 References:
Configure SSL Forward Proxy – Palo Alto Networks
Setting Up SSL Forward Proxy with Enterprise CA



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.