Question # 1
An engineer configures a specific service route in an environment with multiple virtual
systems instead of using the inherited global service route configuration.
What type of service route can be used for this configuration? A. IPv6 Source or Destination Address
B. Destination-Based Service Route
C. IPv4 Source Interface
D. Inherit Global Setting
Reveal Answer
C. IPv4 Source Interface
Explanation:
When configuring service routes on a Palo Alto firewall:
By default, all services (DNS, updates, PAN-DB, WildFire, etc.) use the management interface (global setting).
In multi-vsys environments, you can override this global configuration and define service routes per virtual system.
The supported type of service route override in this context is:
IPv4 Source Interface (and Source Address if needed) → This allows traffic for services to egress from a specific data interface rather than the management interface.
This gives admins more flexibility and security by isolating services per VSYS.
❌ Why other options are incorrect
A. IPv6 Source or Destination Address
❌ Not correct.Service routes support IPv4 source interface/source address. IPv6 service routes are supported in PAN-OS, but per-vsys overrides are specifically IPv4-based.
B. Destination-Based Service Route
❌ Not correct. Service routes are configured based on the service type (e.g., DNS, updates, WildFire), not based on the destination.
D. Inherit Global Setting
❌ Not correct. This is the default behavior (inherit from global configuration). The question specifically says the engineer configures a specific service route instead of using inherited global config, so this is not the answer.
📖 Reference
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs – Service Routes
PCNSE Study Guide: Service routes can be configured per-vsys using IPv4 source interface/address.
Question # 2
Certain services in a customer implementation are not working, including Palo Alto
Networks Dynamic version updates.
Which CLI command can the firewall administrator use to verify if the service routes were
correctly installed and that they are active in the Management Plane? A. debug dataplane Internal vif route 250
B. show routing route type service-route
C. show routing route type management
D. debug dataplane internal vif route 255
Reveal Answer
B. show routing route type service-route
Explanation:
When certain services (like Dynamic Updates, WildFire, or URL Filtering) are not working, the issue often lies in service route configuration. These routes determine how the management plane reaches external services.
To verify that service routes are correctly installed and active, use:
bash
show routing route type service-route
This command displays:
The destination IPs for services
The interface and next-hop used
Whether the route is active
📚 Reference: Palo Alto Networks – Service Route Configuration
❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong:
A & D. debug dataplane internal vif route: These are low-level dataplane diagnostics — not relevant to management plane service routes.
C. show routing route type management: Displays routes for management traffic — not service-specific routes.
Question # 3
An administrator is troubleshooting intermittent connectivity problems with a user's
GlobalProtect connection. Packet captures at the firewall reveal missing UDP packets,
suggesting potential packet loss on the connection. The administrator aims to resolve the
issue by enforcing an SSL tunnel over TCP specifically for this user.
What configuration change is necessary to implement this troubleshooting solution for the
user? A. Enable SSL tunnel within the GlobalProtect gateway remote user's settings.
B. Modify the user's client to prioritize UDP traffic for GlobalProtect.
C. Enable SSL tunnel over TCP in a new agent configuration for the specific user.
D. Increase the user's VPN bandwidth allocation in the GlobalProtect settings.
Reveal Answer
C. Enable SSL tunnel over TCP in a new agent configuration for the specific user.
Explanation:
Why This Option?
1.Problem:
Intermittent connectivity due to UDP packet loss (as seen in packet captures).
Solution: Force the user’s GlobalProtect client to use TCP instead of UDP for reliability.
2.Configuration:
Create a new Agent Configuration (under Network > GlobalProtect > Agent Settings) with:
Tunnel Mode = SSL (which uses TCP port 443).
Assign this configuration to the specific user via User/Group ID or Source IP.
Why Not Other Options?
A. GlobalProtect gateways don’t have per-user SSL tunnel settings—this is configured in agent settings.
B. Prioritizing UDP would worsen the packet loss issue.
D. Bandwidth allocation doesn’t fix packet loss; it only manages throughput.
Steps:
Navigate to: Network > GlobalProtect > Agent Settings > Add.
Set Tunnel Protocol = SSL (forces TCP).
Scope to the user via Source User or Source IP.
Reference:
GlobalProtect Admin Guide:
"Use Agent Configurations to enforce TCP-based SSL tunnels for users experiencing UDP issues."
Question # 4
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
Reveal Answer
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 # 5
Which link is responsible for synchronizing sessions between high availability (HA) peers? A. HA1B. HA3C. HA4D. HA2
Reveal Answer
D. HA2
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks High Availability (HA) configuration, synchronization between HA peers ensures that the passive firewall can seamlessly take over if the active firewall fails. The HA2 link is responsible for synchronizing session information, including active sessions, IPsec security associations (SAs), and other data plane states, between the HA peers. This link operates over a dedicated data interface or in-band and uses a proprietary protocol to replicate real-time session data, enabling the passive firewall to maintain continuity during a failover.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. HA1: The HA1 link is used for control plane synchronization, including HA configuration, heartbeats, and state information (e.g., active/passive status), but it does not synchronize session data. It typically uses a dedicated management interface or in-band connection. The PCNSE Study Guide clarifies its control plane role.
B. HA3: HA3 is not a standard HA link in Palo Alto Networks firewalls. The HA architecture includes HA1 and HA2, with no defined HA3 link for synchronization or other purposes. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide confirms the absence of HA3.
C. HA4: HA4 is also not a recognized HA link in PAN-OS. The synchronization process is limited to HA1 and HA2, and no documentation supports HA4 as a functional component. The PCNSE Study Guide reinforces the HA1/HA2 framework.
Practical Steps:
Navigate to Device > High Availability > General.
Configure the HA2 link by selecting a data interface or enabling in-band synchronization.
Set the HA2 backup link (optional) for redundancy under HA2 Backup.
Ensure matching HA2 settings (e.g., IP address, port) on both peers.
Commit the configuration.
Verify synchronization status via Device > High Availability > Operational Commands > Show HA State or CLI show high-availability state.
Check session sync via Monitor > System Logs for HA-related messages.
Additional Considerations:
Ensure sufficient bandwidth on the HA2 link, as session sync can be data-intensive.
Use a dedicated HA2 link for large-scale deployments to avoid performance impacts.
Confirm PAN-OS version (e.g., 11.1) supports HA2, which it does by default.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details HA2 for session synchronization.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains HA link responsibilities.
Question # 6
An administrator configures a site-to-site IPsec VPN tunnel between a PA-850 and an
external customer on their policy-based VPN devices.
What should an administrator configure to route interesting traffic through the VPN tunnel? A. Proxy IDsB. GRE EncapsulationC. Tunnel MonitorD. ToS Header
Reveal Answer
A. Proxy IDs
Explanation:
Why Proxy IDs?
1.Policy-Based VPNs:
For policy-based VPNs (common with third-party devices), Proxy IDs define the "interesting traffic" that should be routed through the tunnel.
They specify the source and destination subnets (and sometimes protocols/ports) that trigger encryption.
2.Configuration:
On the Palo Alto firewall, Proxy IDs are set under:
Network > IPsec Tunnels > [Tunnel] > Proxy IDs.
Must match exactly on both ends of the VPN.
Why Not Other Options?
B. GRE Encapsulation Used for GRE tunnels, not IPsec policy-based VPNs.
C. Tunnel Monitor Checks tunnel liveliness (doesn’t define traffic).
D. ToS Header Used for QoS, not traffic selection.
Reference:
Palo Alto IPsec VPN Guide:
"Proxy IDs determine which traffic is encrypted in policy-based VPNs."
Question # 7
An internal audit team has requested additional information to be included inside traffic logs
forwarded from Palo Alto Networks firewalls to an internal syslog server.
Where can the firewall engineer define the data to be added into each forwarded log? A. Custom Log Format within Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
B. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile
C. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management
D. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects
Reveal Answer
A. Custom Log Format within Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
Explanation:
To add custom data fields to logs being forwarded to a syslog server, an engineer must create a Custom Log Format. This is configured within the Syslog Server Profile itself.
Path: Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
Process: Edit or create a new syslog server profile. Under the Custom Log Format section, you can define a new format. This interface allows you to add specific fields (from a long list of available variables like $receive_time, $srcip, $rule_name) and arrange them in a custom string that will be sent to the syslog server for each log type (e.g., Traffic, Threat, URL).
This provides the granular control needed to meet an audit team's specific requirements for log content.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Built-in Actions within Objects > Log Forwarding Profile: A Log Forwarding Profile is used to select which log types (Traffic, Threat, etc.) are forwarded to a server profile. It does not contain settings for customizing the content or format of the log messages themselves.
C. Logging and Reporting Settings within Device > Setup > Management: This section configures general logging parameters like the firewall's system log buffer size and email reporting settings. It does not control the format of logs sent to external servers.
D. Data Patterns within Objects > Custom Objects: Data Patterns are used to define custom sets of alphanumeric characters (like credit card numbers) for use in Data Filtering profiles to detect and prevent data exfiltration. They are unrelated to configuring log forwarding formats.
Valid Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide | Manage Log Forwarding | Create a Syslog Server Profile for Custom Log Formats: The official documentation details the process of creating a Custom Log Format within a Syslog Server Profile to add specific fields to forwarded logs. This is the definitive method for customizing log content for external systems.
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.