Question # 1
Refer to the diagram. Users at an internal system want to ssh to the SSH server. The
server is configured to respond only to the ssh requests coming from IP 172.16.16.1.
In order to reach the SSH server only from the Trust zone, which Security rule and NAT
rule must be configured on the firewall? A. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: Static IP / 172.16.15.1
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshB. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: 192.168.15.0/24 -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 192.168.15.1 -
Destination Translation: Static IP / 172.16.15.10
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: 192.168.15.0/24 -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshC. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Trust -
Destination IP: 192.168.15.1 -
Destination Translation: Static IP /172.16.15.10
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: sshD. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: ssh
Reveal Answer
D. NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust -
Source IP: Any -
Destination Zone: Server -
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10 -
Application: ssh
Explanation:
The SSH server is configured to only respond to requests from IP 172.16.16.1. To meet this requirement, the firewall must perform Source NAT so that outbound SSH traffic from the Trust zone appears to originate from that specific IP.
The correct configuration is:
1.NAT Rule:
Source Zone: Trust
Source IP: Any
Destination Zone: Server
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10
Source Translation: dynamic-ip-and-port / ethernet1/4
2.Security Rule:
Source Zone: Trust
Source IP: Any
Destination Zone: Server
Destination IP: 172.16.15.10
Application: ssh
3.This setup ensures:
Traffic from internal users is NATed to the expected source IP.
The SSH server receives traffic that matches its configured source filter.
The firewall allows the traffic through the correct zones and application.
📘 Reference: Verified via Exam4Training PCNSE Question #71 and Ace4Sure PCNSE Scenario
Question # 2
An administrator is configuring a Panorama device group. Which two objects are
configurable? (Choose two.) A. DNS Proxy
B. SSL/TLS profiles
C. address groups
D. URL Filtering profiles
Reveal Answer
C. address groups
D. URL Filtering profiles
Explanation:
To understand why, you must remember the core principle of the Panorama Device Group structure: its purpose is to push shared policy and object configurations to a group of firewalls. The key is knowing which configurations are universal (shared) and which are specific to a firewall's placement in the network (unique).
Device Groups are used for policies and objects that can be shared across multiple firewalls. Let's break down the correct answers:
C. address groups
Why it's configurable: Address groups (and other object types like address objects, service objects, and service groups) are abstract definitions (e.g., "Finance-Servers" = 10.10.10.0/24). These definitions are perfectly reusable across many firewalls. By configuring them in a Device Group, you ensure consistency and simplify policy management for all firewalls in that group.
D. URL Filtering profiles
Why it's configurable: Security profiles (URL Filtering, Anti-Virus, Vulnerability Protection, etc.) are policy building blocks. You can define a "Standard-Web-Policy" profile in a Device Group and then reference that same profile in the Security policies of all member firewalls. This ensures a uniform security posture across the organization.
Detailed Analysis of the Incorrect Options:
A. DNS Proxy
Why it's NOT configurable: DNS Proxy is a network service that must be bound to a specific VLAN or interface on a firewall. Since each firewall has unique interfaces and network placements, this configuration cannot be shared across a group of devices. This type of network configuration is pushed from Templates, not Device Groups.
B. SSL/TLS profiles
Why it's NOT configurable (in this context): This is a subtle but important distinction. While you can create an SSL/TLS Service Profile (which contains the certificates and trust settings) in a Device Group, you cannot apply it to an interface or service there. The application of the profile (e.g., assigning it to a Decryption policy) is done in a Device Group, but the core profile configuration that includes interface-specific settings is a Template-level function. More importantly, the actual decryption rules that use the profile are configured in the Device Group. However, given the option list and the standard PCNSE curriculum, this is not considered a primary "object" for a Device Group in the same way as Address Groups or Security Profiles. The safest answer is that it's primarily a Template/Network function.
PCNSE Exam Reference & Key Takeaway:
Core Concept: The separation of duties between Device Groups and Templates in Panorama.
Device Groups: For policies and shared objects (Security, NAT, Decryption Policies, Address Groups, Service Groups, Security Profiles).
Templates: For network configuration (Interfaces, Zones, Virtual Routers, VLANs, DNS Proxy, DHCP Server, SSL/TLS Service Profiles for inbound decryption).
Simplified Rule of Thumb: If the configuration answers "What is the rule?" or "What is the security setting?", it goes in a Device Group. If it answers "Where is the firewall connected?" or "How is a network service provided?", it goes in a Template.
Question # 3
An administrator troubleshoots an issue that causes packet drops.
Which log type will help the engineer verify whether packet buffer protection was activated? A. Data FilteringB. ConfigurationC. ThreatD. Traffic
Reveal Answer
C. Threat
Explanation:
Packet buffer protection is a security feature designed to prevent single-session Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks that could overwhelm the firewall's resources. When this feature is activated, the firewall takes action against offending sessions by dropping packets or even blocking the source IP address. These actions are logged as security events.
Threat Logs: This is the correct location because the packet drops and session discards caused by packet buffer protection are classified as security-related events. The firewall generates specific Threat IDs (e.g., PBP Packet Drop or PBP Session Discarded) that are recorded in the Threat logs. This allows an administrator to specifically filter for these events to confirm that the protection mechanism has been triggered and is actively mitigating a potential attack.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Data Filtering: Data filtering logs are for events related to preventing sensitive data from leaving the network. This has no relation to packet buffer utilization.
B. Configuration: Configuration logs record changes made to the firewall's configuration by an administrator. While the initial setup of packet buffer protection would be in these logs, they do not show its activation during an attack.
D. Traffic: Traffic logs record information about network sessions (start, end, allow, deny, drop). While the packets are indeed being dropped, the reason for the drop (i.e., packet buffer protection) is not explicitly detailed in the standard traffic log. The specific security event is recorded in the Threat log.
Question # 4
Which three authentication types can be used to authenticate users? (Choose three.) A. Local database authentication
B. PingID
C. Kerberos single sign-on
D. GlobalProtect client
E. Cloud authentication service
Reveal Answer
A. Local database authentication
C. Kerberos single sign-on
E. Cloud authentication service
Explanation:
Why These Options?
1.Local Database Authentication (A):
The firewall stores usernames/passwords locally (Device > Administrators).
Used for admin login or captive portal authentication.
2.Kerberos Single Sign-On (C):
Integrates with Active Directory for seamless authentication (e.g., for User-ID or captive portal).
Users are automatically authenticated via their domain credentials.
3.Cloud Authentication Service (E):
Supports SAML, OAUTH, or LDAP via cloud providers (e.g., Azure AD, Okta).
Used for GlobalProtect, admin login, or captive portal.
Why Not Others?
B. PingID This is a specific MFA product, not a general authentication type (it would fall under cloud authentication).
D. GlobalProtect Client This is a VPN client, not an authentication method (it uses other methods like SAML or local DB).
Reference:
Palo Alto Authentication Guide:
"Local, Kerberos, and cloud authentication are core methods for user verification."
Question # 5
How can a firewall engineer bypass App-ID and content inspection features on a Palo Alto
Networks firewall when troubleshooting? A. Create a custom application, define its properties and signatures, and ensure all
scanning options in the "Advanced" tab are uncheckedB. Create a custom application, define its properties, then create an application override
and reference the custom applicationC. Create a new security rule specifically for the affected traffic, but do not reference any
Security Profiles inside the ruleD. Create a new security rule specifically for the affected traffic, and select "Disable Server
Response Inspection"
Reveal Answer
B. Create a custom application, define its properties, then create an application override
and reference the custom application
Explanation:
When troubleshooting, sometimes you need to bypass App-ID and content inspection so that traffic is forwarded purely based on port/protocol without being altered or blocked by application signatures or content scanning.
The supported method in Palo Alto Networks firewalls is to use an Application Override Policy:
Create a custom application that represents the traffic (e.g., based on port and protocol).
Apply an Application Override Policy to match the specific traffic and map it to the custom app.
This tells the firewall to skip App-ID and content inspection for that traffic, allowing raw forwarding for troubleshooting.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Create a custom application … ensure scanning options unchecked
Custom applications alone don’t bypass App-ID processing or content inspection. You still need the App Override policy for that.
C. Create a new security rule without Security Profiles
This only skips threat/content profiles (like AV, Anti-Spyware, URL filtering), but App-ID inspection still happens. Doesn’t fully bypass inspection.
V
D. Create a new security rule and disable Server Response Inspection
This only skips Server Response Inspection (SRI) for HTTP responses, not full App-ID or content inspection. Very limited.
📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Docs – Application Override:
“An Application Override policy allows you to bypass App-ID and Content-ID inspection for specified traffic. The firewall assigns the traffic to a custom application and forwards it without further inspection.”
Question # 6
An engineer needs to collect User-ID mappings from the company's existing proxies.
What two methods can be used to pull this data from third party proxies? (Choose two.) A. Client probingB. SyslogC. XFF HeadersD. Server Monitoring
Reveal Answer
B. SyslogC. XFF Headers
Explanation:
This question tests your knowledge of how the Palo Alto Networks firewall integrates with third-party systems to gather User-ID information, specifically when a proxy server is involved in the traffic path.
The Core Concept: User-ID from Proxies
In a network where all user traffic flows through a proxy server, the firewall often only sees the proxy's IP address as the source of traffic. To apply user-based policies, the firewall needs to learn which user is behind the proxy's IP address at any given time. The firewall has specific methods to extract this user-to-IP mapping information from proxy servers.
Analyzing the Correct Options:
Why Option B (Syslog) is Correct:
This is the most common and reliable method for integrating with third-party proxies.
How it works: The proxy server is configured to send its audit or access logs to the Palo Alto Networks firewall via syslog (typically on UDP port 514). These logs contain entries that tie a username to an internal IP address.
The firewall's User-ID agent includes a Syslog Parser. You configure this parser with a specific regular expression to "teach" the firewall how to read the proxy's log format and extract the key fields: timestamp, username, and IP address.
Example: A syslog entry from a proxy might look like:
2023-10-27 10:15:30 user=jdoe src=192.168.1.100 url=example.com
The regex would be built to capture jdoe as the user and 192.168.1.100 as the IP.
Once parsed, the firewall adds this mapping to its User-IP mapping table and can apply policies based on the user jdoe.
Why Option C (XFF Headers) is Correct:
1.X-Forwarded-For (XFF) is a standard HTTP header used by proxies, load balancers, and other intermediaries to identify the originating IP address of a client connecting to a web server.
2.How it works: When the proxy forwards an HTTP/HTTPS request to the destination server, it adds an X-Forwarded-For: header containing the original client's IP address.
The Palo Alto Networks firewall can be configured to monitor this header. In the User-ID configuration (Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Monitor HTTP Headers), you can enable monitoring for the X-Forwarded-For header.
When the firewall sees traffic from the proxy's IP address and detects an X-Forwarded-For header with an IP inside it, it can map that internal IP to the user. This mapping is often combined with another method (like captive portal or client probing) to finally get the username for that IP.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
Why Option A (Client Probing) is Incorrect:
1.Client Probing (or WMI probing) is a method where the firewall directly queries Windows hosts (via WMI) or UNIX hosts (via SSH) to ask "which user is logged in?"
This method bypasses the proxy. It queries the endpoint directly on the network. It does not "pull data from" the proxy itself. The question specifically asks for methods to get data from the third-party proxies.
Why Option D (Server Monitoring) is Incorrect:
1.Server Monitoring is a method where the firewall monitors authentication logs directly from servers (e.g., Windows Event Logs from a Domain Controller via WMI or syslog from a RADIUS server).
2.Similar to client probing, this method gets data from the authentication source or the endpoint, not from the proxy server. The proxy is not involved in this data collection method.
Reference and Key Concepts for the PCNSE Exam:
1.Primary Use Case: The classic scenario for using these methods is when the firewall is deployed in front of a proxy server (e.g., a forward proxy in a DMZ). All internal users egress through this proxy, so the firewall only sees the proxy's IP. To apply user-based policies, it must learn the mappings from the proxy.
2.GUI Path for Syslog Parsing: Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Add Syslog Parsing Rule
3.GUI Path for HTTP Header Monitoring: Device > User Identification > User Mapping > Monitor HTTP Headers
4.Combination of Methods: Often, you use both methods together. The firewall uses the XFF header to learn the internal IP address of the user behind the proxy. It then uses another method (like client probing or server monitoring) to map that internal IP address to a specific username.
5Key Differentiator: Remember, if the question is about getting data from the proxy itself, the answers will always revolve around syslog and HTTP headers.
Question # 7
An engineer has been asked to limit which routes are shared by running two different areas
within an OSPF implementation. However, the devices share a common link for
communication. Which virtual router configuration supports running multiple instances of
the OSPF protocol over a single link? A. OSPFV3B. ECMPC. ASBRD. OSBF
Reveal Answer
A. OSPFV3
Explanation:
Why OSPFv3?
1.Multiple OSPF Instances over a Single Link:
OSPFv3 (Open Shortest Path First version 3) supports multiple instances on a single interface.
Each instance operates independently, allowing different routing domains (areas) to share the same physical link.
2.Key Feature:
OSPFv3 uses Instance ID (ranging from 0 to 255) to differentiate between instances on the same link.
This enables segregation of routing information (e.g., limiting route sharing between areas).
Why Not Other Options?
B. ECMP Equal-Cost Multi-Pathing balances traffic across multiple routes, but doesn’t support multiple OSPF instances.
C. ASBR Autonomous System Boundary Router connects OSPF to other protocols, but doesn’t enable multiple instances on a link.
D. OSBF Not a valid protocol (likely typo for OSPF).
Configuration Example:
In the virtual router, configure OSPFv3 with distinct instance IDs for each area.
Reference:
Palo Alto OSPFv3 Documentation:
"OSPFv3 instance IDs allow multiple routing domains over a single link."
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.