Question # 1
ln a security-first network, what is the recommended threshold value for apps and threats to
be dynamically updated? A. 1 to 4 hours
B. 6 to 12 hours
C. 24 hours
D. 36 hours
Reveal Answer
A. 1 to 4 hours
Explanation:
In a security-first network, where minimizing exposure to new threats is paramount, the recommended threshold value for dynamically updating Applications and Threats on a Palo Alto Networks firewall is critical to balance security and stability. The Applications and Threats dynamic updates deliver new App-IDs, threat signatures, and WildFire verdicts to enhance protection against emerging malware and exploits. A threshold of 1 to 4 hours (set under Device > Dynamic Updates > Schedules) allows the firewall to download and hold updates for a short period, enabling administrators to review new App-IDs via "Review Apps" and assess potential impacts on Security policies before automatic application. This frequent update schedule ensures rapid response to threats while providing a brief window for validation, aligning with a security-first approach.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. 6 to 12 hours: This longer threshold delays the application of new threat signatures, increasing the risk window for zero-day attacks in a security-first network. While it allows more review time, it compromises timely protection. The PCNSE Study Guide suggests shorter intervals for critical networks.
C. 24 hours: A 24-hour threshold significantly postpones updates, leaving the network vulnerable to new threats for a full day. This is unsuitable for a security-first posture, where rapid updates are essential. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide advises against such delays in high-risk environments.
D. 36 hours: This extended threshold further exacerbates the vulnerability period, making it the least secure option. It is inappropriate for a network prioritizing security, as it allows outdated signatures to persist. The PCNSE Study Guide recommends shorter thresholds for proactive defense.
Practical Steps:
Navigate to Device > Dynamic Updates > Schedules.
Create or edit an Applications and Threats update schedule.
Set the check frequency to every 1-4 hours and the threshold to 1-4 hours.
After an update, go to Device > Dynamic Updates > Review Apps to evaluate new App-IDs.
Commit the configuration and monitor impact via Monitor > Threat Logs.
Adjust policies if needed to avoid disruptions.
Additional Considerations:
Ensure sufficient bandwidth for frequent updates.
Test in a staging environment if possible to validate changes.
As of the current date and time, PAN-OS 11.1 supports this configuration by default.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Recommends 1- to 4-hour thresholds for security-first networks.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Outlines best practices for dynamic update scheduling.
Reveal Answer
C. Option C
Explanation:
In the provided exhibit, Option C shows the Panorama settings on the firewall with the option "Disable Panorama Policy and Objects" checked. This setting has a critical effect:
When enabled, it disables the download of policy and object configurations from Panorama to the firewall.
However, it also stops the firewall from sending Traffic and Configuration logs to Panorama.
Importantly, other log types (e.g., Threat, System, WildFire) may still be sent to Panorama if the firewall is configured to do so.
This explains why the administrator cannot see Traffic logs in Panorama reports, while other logs might still be arriving. The firewall is actively blocking Traffic logs due to this setting.
Why the other options are incorrect:
Option A: This shows a security policy rule with URL filtering. While misconfigurations here could affect traffic flow, they would not specifically block Traffic logs from being sent to Panorama.
Option B: This shows syslog server settings. Misconfiguration here might affect logs sent to a syslog server, but it would not impact logs sent to Panorama.
Option D: This shows Panorama server communication settings (timeouts, certificates). While misconfigurations here could prevent all communication with Panorama (including all log types), the question specifies that only Traffic logs are missing. Option C is more precise, as it selectively blocks Traffic and Configuration logs.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide: The "Disable Panorama Policy and Objects" setting is documented to prevent the firewall from sending Traffic and Configuration logs to Panorama. This is a common oversight when troubleshooting missing Traffic logs.
PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 5: Panorama): Understanding the interaction between firewalls and Panorama, including log forwarding behavior, is a key objective.
Question # 3
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 # 4
Refer to the exhibit.
Based on the screenshots above what is the correct order in which the various rules are
deployed to firewalls inside the DATACENTER_DG device group? A. shared pre-rules
DATACENTER DG pre rules
rules configured locally on the firewall
shared post-rules
DATACENTER_DG post-rules
DATACENTER.DG default rulesB. shared pre-rules
DATACENTER_DG pre-rules
rules configured locally on the firewall
shared post-rules
DATACENTER.DG post-rules
shared default rulesC. shared pre-rules
DATACENTER_DG pre-rules
rules configured locally on the firewall
DATACENTER_DG post-rules
shared post-rules
shared default rulesD. shared pre-rules
DATACENTER_DG pre-rules
rules configured locally on the firewall
DATACENTER_DG post-rules
shared post-rules
DATACENTER_DG default rules
Reveal Answer
B. shared pre-rules
DATACENTER_DG pre-rules
rules configured locally on the firewall
shared post-rules
DATACENTER.DG post-rules
shared default rules
Explanation:
When Panorama pushes policies to firewalls in a device group like DATACENTER_DG, the rules are evaluated in a strict order to ensure consistent policy enforcement. The correct deployment order is:
Shared pre-rules – Global rules pushed to all firewalls
DATACENTER_DG pre-rules – Device-group-specific rules applied before local rules
Local firewall rules – Rules configured directly on the firewall
Shared post-rules – Global rules applied after local rules
DATACENTER_DG post-rules – Device-group-specific rules applied after shared post-rules
Shared default rules – Predefined rules like intrazone-default and interzone-default
This order ensures that organization-wide policies are enforced first, followed by device-specific logic, and finally default behavior.
📘 Authoritative Source:
Panorama Device Group Policies – Palo Alto TechDocs
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
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 # 7
When a new firewall joins a high availability (HA) cluster, the cluster members will
synchronize all existing sessions over which HA port? A. HA1B. HA3C. HA2D. HA4
Reveal Answer
D. HA4
Explanation:
When a new firewall joins a High Availability (HA) cluster, the synchronization of session tables, forwarding tables, and IPSec security associations occurs over the HA4 interface. This interface is specifically designed for session synchronization between HA cluster members, ensuring seamless failover and continuity of traffic flows.
The HA4 link is used in HA clustering deployments (not just standard active/passive pairs) and is critical for maintaining real-time state information across all members with the same cluster ID.
This behavior is confirmed in Palo Alto’s documentation on HA Synchronization and reinforced in PCNSE prep materials2.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. HA1: Used for control and heartbeat messages (e.g., hello packets, configuration sync), not session synchronization.
B. HA3: Used for packet forwarding between active/passive peers during asymmetric traffic flow, not for syncing session tables.
C. HA2: Handles bulk data synchronization (e.g., routing tables, User-ID info), but not session cache in HA clusters. It’s used in standard HA pairs, not clusters.
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.