Question # 1
A company configures its WildFire analysis profile to forward any file type to the WildFire
public cloud. A company employee receives an email containing an unknown link that
downloads a malicious Portable Executable (PE) file.
What does Advanced WildFire do when the link is clicked? A. Performs malicious content analysis on the linked page, but not the corresponding PE
file.B. Performs malicious content analysis on the linked page and the corresponding PE file.
C. Does not perform malicious content analysis on either the linked page or the
corresponding PE file.
D. Does not perform malicious content analysis on the linked page, but performs it on the
corresponding PE file.
Reveal Answer
B. Performs malicious content analysis on the linked page and the corresponding PE file.
Explanation:
Advanced WildFire provides multi-stage analysis for both web content and downloaded files. When a user clicks a suspicious link, WildFire can:
Analyze the linked page for:
Embedded scripts
Redirects
Exploit kits
Malicious behaviors
Analyze the downloaded file (in this case, a Portable Executable) for:
Behavioral indicators in a sandbox
Static and dynamic analysis
Malware signatures
Because the WildFire profile is configured to forward any file type, and the firewall detects both the URL and the downloaded PE file, both are submitted for analysis.
📚 Reference: Palo Alto Networks – WildFire Analysis Workflow
❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong:
A. Incorrect — WildFire does analyze the PE file.
C. Incorrect — WildFire analyzes both components if properly configured.
D. Incorrect — WildFire does analyze the linked page if it’s suspicious.
Question # 2
What are three prerequisites for credential phishing prevention to function? (Choose three.) A. In the URL filtering profile, use the drop-down list to enable user credential detectionB. Enable Device-ID in the zoneC. Select the action for Site Access for each categoryD. Add the URL filtering profile to one or more Security policy rulesE. Set phishing category to block in the URL Filtering profile
Reveal Answer
A. In the URL filtering profile, use the drop-down list to enable user credential detectionD. Add the URL filtering profile to one or more Security policy rulesE. Set phishing category to block in the URL Filtering profile
Explanation:
To enable Credential Phishing Prevention on Palo Alto Networks firewalls, three key prerequisites must be met:
✅ A. Enable user credential detection in the URL filtering profile
This activates the firewall’s ability to inspect web traffic for credential submissions.
You must select the User Credential Detection method (e.g., IP User Mapping, Group Mapping, Domain Credential Filter) from the drop-down in the URL Filtering profile.
✅ D. Add the URL filtering profile to one or more Security policy rules
The URL Filtering profile must be attached to Security policy rules that allow traffic.
Without this, the firewall won’t inspect or enforce credential phishing protections.
✅ E. Set phishing category to block in the URL Filtering profile
The phishing category must be explicitly set to Block to prevent access to known phishing sites.
This ensures that credential submission attempts to malicious sites are actively stopped.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Enable Device-ID in the zone Device-ID is unrelated to credential phishing prevention. It’s used for IoT and endpoint visibility.
C. Select the action for Site Access for each category While category actions are part of URL filtering, this option is too generic and doesn’t specifically enable credential phishing prevention.
References:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Set Up Credential Phishing Prevention
Ace4Sure PCNSE Practice – Credential Phishing Prerequisites
Question # 3
Which operation will impact the performance of the management plane? A. Decrypting SSL sessionsB. Generating a SaaS Application reportC. Enabling DoS protectionD. Enabling packet buffer protection
Reveal Answer
B. Generating a SaaS Application report
Explanation :
In a Palo Alto Networks firewall, the management plane handles tasks such as configuration, logging, reporting, and communication with external systems (e.g., Panorama), while the data plane processes traffic, including security enforcement. Operations that impact the management plane’s performance are those that consume its CPU and memory resources, such as generating reports or processing logs. Among the options, generating a SaaS Application report involves the management plane analyzing traffic logs and application data to create detailed reports, which can significantly tax its resources, especially during peak usage or with large datasets. The Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide notes that report generation, particularly for application usage, is a management plane function that can lead to performance degradation if resource-intensive.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Decrypting SSL sessions: SSL decryption is performed by the data plane, which handles packet processing, including cryptographic operations. While it can increase data plane CPU usage, it does not directly impact the management plane. The PCNSE Study Guide confirms decryption is a data plane task
C. Enabling DoS protection: DoS Protection profiles, which mitigate flood attacks, are enforced by the data plane through rate-limiting and packet inspection. The initial configuration occurs on the management plane, but the ongoing operation affects the data plane. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide specifies DoS protection as a data plane function.
D. Enabling packet buffer protection: Packet buffer protection addresses data plane resource exhaustion due to excessive buffering, managed entirely by the data plane. It does not involve management plane processing. The PCNSE Study Guide identifies this as a data plane optimization.
Practical Steps:
Monitor management plane performance via Device > High Availability > Resources or CLI command show running resource-monitor.
Schedule SaaS Application report generation (Monitor > Reports > SaaS Application Usage) during off-peak hours to minimize impact.
Optimize report settings (e.g., reduce time range or data granularity) if performance issues persist.
Commit changes and verify resource usage post-generation.
Additional Considerations:
Management plane performance can also be affected by high log rates or frequent Panorama syncs, but these are not listed options.
As of 11:23 AM PKT on Thursday, August 21, 2025, ensure any ongoing report generation aligns with current traffic patterns to assess impact accurately.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details management plane tasks, including report generation.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Differentiates management plane (e.g., reporting) from data plane (e.g., decryption, DoS) functions.
Question # 4
Which statement about High Availability timer settings is true? A. Use the Critical timer for faster failover timer settings.
B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings
C. Use the Moderate timer for typical failover timer settings
D. Use the Recommended timer for faster failover timer settings.
Reveal Answer
B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings
Explanation:
Palo Alto Networks firewalls use timers to monitor the health of the HA peers and trigger a failover if a peer is detected as failed. These timers are categorized into three predefined sets:
Recommended: This is the default timer setting. It provides a balance between detecting failures and avoiding false positives caused by temporary network issues. This is the setting you would use for a typical, stable network environment.
Aggressive: This setting uses the shortest possible timer values. It is designed to provide the fastest possible failover detection. You would use this in environments where downtime is extremely critical and you need to fail over as quickly as possible, even at the risk of a false failover from a minor network fluctuation.
Critical: This setting uses a failover threshold that is even more stringent than the Aggressive setting. The timer values are so small that they are only applicable in very specific, high-performance environments and can be prone to false positives if not used carefully.
Moderate: There is no pre-defined "Moderate" timer setting in the Palo Alto Networks HA configuration. The available options are Recommended, Aggressive, and Critical.
Analysis of the Options
A. Use the Critical timer for faster failover timer settings: While the Critical timer is fast, the Aggressive timer is the most commonly recommended choice for "faster failover" in a typical setup. The Critical timer is a more specialized, extreme setting.
B. Use the Aggressive timer for faster failover timer settings: This is the correct statement. The Aggressive timer is specifically designed for environments that require faster failover detection than the default "Recommended" setting.
C. Use the Moderate timer for typical failover timer settings: This is incorrect. There is no "Moderate" timer. The "Recommended" timer is the one used for typical settings.
D. Use the Recommended timer for faster failover timer settings: This is incorrect. The Recommended timer is the default and is designed for normal operations, not for fast failover. The Aggressive and Critical timers are the options for faster failover
Question # 5
Users have reported an issue when they are trying to access a server on your network. The
requests aren’t taking the expected route. You discover that there are two different static
routes on the firewall for the server. What is used to determine which route has priority? A. The first route installedB. The route with the lowest administrative distanceC. Bidirectional Forwarding DetectionD. The route with the highest administrative distance
Reveal Answer
B. The route with the lowest administrative distance
Explanation:
When multiple static routes exist for the same destination on a Palo Alto Networks firewall, the firewall uses Administrative Distance (AD) to determine which route takes precedence. The route with the lowest AD is considered more trustworthy and is installed in the Routing Information Base (RIB) and Forwarding Information Base (FIB).
Static routes typically have a default AD of 10
Dynamic protocols like OSPF or BGP have higher ADs (e.g., OSPF internal = 30, BGP external = 20)
If two static routes exist, the one with the lower AD will be preferred—even if both have the same destination and prefix length
This mechanism ensures predictable routing behavior and allows administrators to configure backup routes by assigning them a higher AD, so they’re only used if the primary route fails.
❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. The first route installed → Route installation order is irrelevant. AD is the deciding factor.
C. Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) → BFD is used for route health monitoring, not for route selection. It can remove a route if the peer fails, but it doesn’t determine priority.
D. The route with the highest administrative distance → Opposite of correct. Higher AD means lower priority.
📚 Reference:
Static Route Overview – Palo Alto Networks
Route Preference Logic – Palo Alto Knowledge Base
Question # 6
An administrator has configured OSPF with Advanced Routing enabled on a Palo Alto
Networks firewall running PAN-OS 10.2. After OSPF was configured, the administrator
noticed that OSPF routes were not being learned.
Which two actions could an administrator take to troubleshoot this issue? (Choose two.) A. Run the CLI command show advanced-routing ospf neighborB. In the WebUI, view the Runtime Stats in the virtual routerC. Look for configuration problems in Network > virtual router > OSPFD. In the WebUI, view Runtime Stats in the logical router
Reveal Answer
A. Run the CLI command show advanced-routing ospf neighborD. In the WebUI, view Runtime Stats in the logical router
Explanation:
1.Background — Advanced Routing
In PAN-OS 10.0 and later, Palo Alto introduced the Advanced Routing Engine (ARE)./
Legacy virtual routers are used only if Advanced Routing is disabled.
If Advanced Routing is enabled, routing protocols (OSPF, BGP, RIP, etc.) are managed under a logical router, not the legacy virtual router.
2.Troubleshooting OSPF with ARE
A. show advanced-routing ospf neighbor ✅
This CLI command displays OSPF adjacency status, which is crucial to verify neighbor relationships.
D. Runtime Stats in the logical router ✅
With Advanced Routing enabled, you must check Runtime Stats in the logical router, not in the old virtual router section.
Why Not the Others?
B. Runtime Stats in the virtual router ❌
Not valid when Advanced Routing is enabled. Virtual routers are bypassed in this mode.
C. Look for problems in Network > virtual router > OSPF ❌
Again, wrong location — with ARE, OSPF config is under Network > Logical Routers, not Virtual Routers.
Reference (Official Docs):
Palo Alto Networks — Advanced Routing Overview
🔗 PAN-OS Admin Guide – Advanced Routing Engine
Question # 7
A company wants to implement threat prevention to take action without redesigning the
network routing.
What are two best practice deployment modes for the firewall? (Choose two.) A. TAPB. Layer 2
C. Layer 3
D. Virtual Wire
Reveal Answer
B. Layer 2
D. Virtual Wire
Explanation:
When a company wants to deploy threat prevention without altering its existing routing or IP addressing, the firewall must be inserted transparently. Two deployment modes support this:
Layer 2 Mode: The firewall acts like a switch, forwarding traffic based on MAC addresses. It inspects packets and enforces security policies without requiring changes to IP routing. This mode is ideal for inline deployments where VLANs are already in use. ✅ Transparent, no routing changes required
Virtual Wire Mode: The firewall is placed between two Layer 2 devices and forwards traffic without any IP or MAC address awareness. It’s completely transparent and doesn’t participate in routing or switching. This mode is perfect for drop-in threat prevention, especially in flat networks or where minimal disruption is critical. ✅ Fully transparent, no IP or routing changes
These modes are recommended in Palo Alto’s deployment best practices for threat prevention without redesigning the network.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. TAP Mode: TAP mode allows passive monitoring only. The firewall can inspect traffic but cannot take action—no blocking, no enforcement. It’s useful for visibility but not for prevention.
C. Layer 3 Mode: Requires the firewall to participate in routing. This mode does require network redesign, including IP address changes and route updates. Not suitable when the goal is zero disruption.
Reference
Deployment Modes Overview – Palo Alto Networks
Virtual Wire Interface Configuration
Layer 2 Interface Configuration
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.