Question # 1
Which type of policy in Palo Alto Networks firewalls can use Device-ID as a match
condition? A. NATB. DOS protectionC. QoSD. Tunnel inspection
Reveal Answer
C. QoS
Explanation:
The question asks which type of policy in Palo Alto Networks firewalls can use Device-ID as a match condition. Device-ID, part of the User-ID feature, identifies devices (e.g., laptops, phones) based on their attributes (e.g., MAC address, device type) and allows policies to be applied based on device identity. Let’s evaluate the options to determine where Device-ID can be used as a match condition.
Why C. QoS?
Purpose: Quality of Service (QoS) policies on Palo Alto Networks firewalls allow traffic prioritization and bandwidth management based on various match criteria, including User-ID and Device-ID. Device-ID can be used to classify traffic from specific devices (e.g., prioritizing VoIP phones or limiting bandwidth for guest devices), enabling granular QoS control.
Configuration:
Navigate to Policies > QoS.
Create or edit a QoS policy.
In the match criteria, select Device under the User/Device tab.
Choose a Device-ID group or specific device (e.g., "Corporate-Laptops") identified by the User-ID agent or Terminal Services agent.
Define the QoS class (e.g., priority, bandwidth limit).
Behavior: The firewall applies QoS rules based on the device identity, ensuring tailored traffic management.
Reference: Palo Alto Networks documentation states, "QoS policies support Device-ID as a match condition to enforce bandwidth and prioritization based on device type."
Why Not the Other Options?
A. NAT:
Explanation: Network Address Translation (NAT) policies translate IP addresses and ports but do not support Device-ID as a match condition. NAT rules use source/destination zones, IPs, and ports, not device identity, as the focus is on address mapping, not behavioral or identity-based control.
Why Incorrect: Device-ID is not a valid NAT criterion.
B. DoS Protection:
Explanation: Denial of Service (DoS) protection policies mitigate attacks by rate-limiting or blocking traffic based on source/destination, zones, or applications, but they do not support Device-ID as a match condition. DoS rules are designed for threat mitigation, not device-specific identification.
Why Incorrect:. Device-ID is not applicable to DoS policies
D. Tunnel inspection:
Explanation: Tunnel inspection refers to policies or profiles (e.g., Decryption, VPN) that inspect traffic within tunnels (e.g., IPsec, SSL VPN). While User-ID can be used in Security policies to control tunnel traffic, Device-ID is not a supported match condition for tunnel inspection itself. Tunnel inspection focuses on protocol and content, not device identity.
Why Incorrect: Device-ID is not a valid match for tunnel inspection policies.
Additional Context:
Device-ID Functionality: Device-ID extends User-ID by identifying devices using agents (e.g., Windows User-ID agent with Terminal Services) or profiling (e.g., via MAC OUI or DHCP fingerprints). It is supported in Security and QoS policies for granular control.
Supported Policies:
Security Policies: Use Device-ID to allow/deny traffic based on device.
QoS Policies: Use Device-ID for bandwidth allocation.
Other policy types (NAT, DoS, Tunnel) do not leverage Device-ID.
Configuration Steps:
Enable Device-ID under Device > User Identification > Device Identification.
Configure a Device-ID agent or profiling.
Apply to QoS policies as a match condition.
Best Practices:
Use Device-ID groups for scalability.
Test with Monitor > User-ID to verify device mappings.
Monitor QoS logs under Monitor > Logs > QoS.
PCNSE Exam Relevance: This question tests your understanding of policy types and Device-ID integration, a key topic in the PCNSE exam. It requires knowledge of where device-based conditions apply.
Conclusion:
The type of policy in Palo Alto Networks firewalls that can use Device-ID as a match condition is QoS, allowing the firewall to prioritize or limit traffic based on device identity.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: Device-ID Configuration
Palo Alto Networks Documentation: QoS Policy with Device-ID
ExamTopics PCNSE Discussion: Device-ID Usage
Question # 2
An engineer is pushing configuration from Panorama to a managed firewall What happens
when the pushed Panorama configuration has Address Object names that duplicate the
Address Objects already configured on the firewall? A. The firewall ignores only the pushed objects that have the same name as the locally
configured objects, and it will commit the rest of the pushed configuration.B. The firewall fully commits all of the pushed configuration and overwrites its locally
configured objectsC. The firewall rejects the pushed configuration, and the commit fails.D. The firewall renames the duplicate local objects with "-1" at the end signifying they are
clones; it will update the references to the objects accordingly and fully commit the pushed
configuration.
Reveal Answer
C. The firewall rejects the pushed configuration, and the commit fails.
Explanation:
When an engineer pushes a configuration from Panorama to a managed Palo Alto Networks firewall, conflicts can arise if the pushed configuration contains Address Object names that duplicate those already configured locally on the firewall. In Palo Alto Networks’ management architecture, Panorama manages device groups and templates, but the firewall maintains its own local configuration database. When a push occurs, Panorama attempts to merge its configuration with the firewall’s local settings. If duplicate Address Object names are detected (e.g., the same name with different IP addresses or attributes), the firewall considers this a configuration conflict. By default, the firewall rejects the entire pushed configuration, and the commit fails, requiring the administrator to resolve the conflict manually. The Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide states that duplicate object names cause a commit failure unless explicitly resolved, making option C correct.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. The firewall ignores only the pushed objects that have the same name as the locally configured objects, and it will commit the rest of the pushed configuration: This is incorrect because the firewall does not selectively ignore duplicates and commit the rest. A conflict triggers a full rejection to maintain configuration integrity. The PCNSE Study Guide notes that partial commits are not supported in such cases.
B. The firewall fully commits all of the pushed configuration and overwrites its locally configured objects: This is incorrect because Panorama does not automatically overwrite local objects without explicit override settings (e.g., force sync or template stack override), which are not default. The PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide indicates that overwrites require manual intervention or specific configuration options.
D. The firewall renames the duplicate local objects with "-1" at the end signifying they are clones; it will update the references to the objects accordingly and fully commit the pushed configuration: This is incorrect because the firewall does not automatically rename objects or resolve duplicates by appending "-1". Such behavior would risk policy inconsistencies, and the PCNSE Study Guide confirms that manual resolution is required.
Practical Steps:
1. After the commit fails, check the commit error in Panorama under Commit > Push to Devices > Task Details.
2. Review the conflicting Address Objects in Objects > Addresses on both Panorama and the firewall.
3. Resolve duplicates by either:
Renaming the pushed objects in Panorama to avoid conflicts.
Deleting or modifying the local objects on the firewall to align with Panorama.
Retry the push and commit.
References:
Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS 11.1 Administrator’s Guide: Details configuration push conflicts and commit failure due to duplicate objects.
Palo Alto Networks PCNSE Study Guide: Explains resolution of object name conflicts during Panorama pushes.
Question # 3
With the default TCP and UDP settings on the firewall, what will be the identified
application in the following session? A. IncompleteB. unknown-tcpC. Insufficient-dataD. not-applicable
Reveal Answer
D. not-applicable
Explanation:
Why:
The log shows Action: deny and Session End Reason: policy-deny. When traffic is blocked by policy before App-ID can inspect payload, the firewall can’t identify an application and logs it as not-applicable. This is exactly how PAN-OS behaves when a session is denied on the first packet(s)—no app match is attempted, so the Application field is not-applicable.
Why the others are wrong
A. Incomplete → Used when the TCP 3-way handshake didn’t complete or completed with no identifiable data; typically seen on allowed sessions that later age out/reset, not on immediate policy denies.
B. unknown-tcp → Requires a completed handshake and payload that doesn’t match any App-ID; again, not a policy-deny on first packet.
C. Insufficient-data → Handshake finished and there was some data, but not enough to identify an app; not the case for a policy-denied sess
Question # 4
In a template, which two objects can be configured? (Choose two.) A. SD-WAN path quality profileB. Monitor profileC. IPsec tunnelD. Application group
Reveal Answer
B. Monitor profileC. IPsec tunnel
Explanation:
In PAN-OS, a template is used to configure device-specific settings such as interfaces, zones, routing, and system-level objects. Among the options listed, the following two are valid objects that can be configured within a template:
✅ B. Monitor profile
Monitor profiles are used for link monitoring, tunnel monitoring, and other health checks.
These are configured under Network > Network Profiles > Monitor in the template.
They are essential for high availability and VPN reliability.
✅ C. IPsec tunnel
IPsec tunnels are configured under Network > IPSec Tunnels in the template.
Templates allow centralized configuration of tunnel interfaces, crypto profiles, and peer settings.
This is a core use case for Panorama templates.
❌ Why A and D Are Incorrect:
A. SD-WAN path quality profile SD-WAN profiles are configured in SD-WAN templates, which are separate from standard Panorama templates. They require SD-WAN licensing and are managed differently.
D. Application group Application groups are part of security policy objects, which are managed in device groups, not templates.
🔗 Authoritative Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Templates Overview
PCNSE Practice Guide
Question # 5
An administrator has two pairs of firewalls within the same subnet. Both pairs of firewalls
have been configured to use High Availability mode with Active/Passive. The ARP tables
for upstream routes display the same MAC address being shared for some of these
firewalls.
What can be configured on one pair of firewalls to modify the MAC addresses so they are
no longer in conflict? A. Configure a floating IP between the firewall pairs.
B. Change the Group IDs in the High Availability settings to be different from the other
firewall pair on the same subnet.
C. Change the interface type on the interfaces that have conflicting MAC addresses from
L3 to VLAN.
D. On one pair of firewalls, run the CLI command: set network interface vlan arp.
Reveal Answer
B. Change the Group IDs in the High Availability settings to be different from the other
firewall pair on the same subnet.
Explanation:
When multiple HA firewall pairs exist in the same subnet, and they share the same HA Group ID, Palo Alto Networks firewalls will generate identical virtual MAC addresses for their interfaces. This leads to MAC address conflicts, causing misrouting or packet drops in upstream devices.
To resolve this, the administrator should:
Change the HA Group ID on one of the firewall pairs.
This causes the firewall to generate a unique virtual MAC address, eliminating the conflict.
This is a documented behavior in Palo Alto Networks' HA architecture:
“Virtual MAC addresses are generated based on the HA Group ID. If multiple HA clusters use the same Group ID, the same MAC address is generated.”
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Configure a floating IP between the firewall pairs Floating IPs are used for failover, not MAC address resolution. They don’t affect virtual MAC generation.
C. Change the interface type from L3 to VLAN Interface type changes don’t resolve MAC conflicts caused by HA virtual MAC logic.
D. Run CLI command: set network interface vlan arp This is not a valid or relevant command for resolving HA MAC conflicts.
Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base – HA MAC Address Conflict Resolution
Let me know if you want help verifying current Group IDs or planning a safe HA reconfiguration.
Question # 6
Panorama is being used to upgrade the PAN-OS version on a pair of firewalls in an
active/passive high availability (HA) configuration. The Palo Alto Networks best practice
upgrade steps have been completed in Panorama (Panorama upgraded, backups made,
content updates, and disabling "Preemptive" pushed), and the firewalls are ready for
upgrade. What is the next best step to minimize downtime and ensure a smooth transition? A. Upgrade both HA peers at the same time using Panorama’s "Group HA Peers" option to
ensure version consistencyB. Suspend the active firewall, upgrade it first, and reboot to verify it comes back online
before upgrading the passive peerC. Perform the upgrade on the active firewall first while keeping the passive peer online to
maintain failover capabilityD. Upgrade only the passive peer first, reboot it, restore HA functionality, and then upgrade
the active peer
Reveal Answer
D. Upgrade only the passive peer first, reboot it, restore HA functionality, and then upgrade
the active peer
Explanation:
When upgrading firewalls in an HA pair, the goal is to minimize downtime and maintain service availability. Palo Alto Networks recommends a sequential upgrade process:
✅ Why Option D is Correct
Best practice: Upgrade the passive peer first.
Upgrade the passive firewall → reboot → verify it is healthy.
Fail over traffic to the newly upgraded firewall (making it active).
Upgrade the (now passive) peer.
This ensures that one firewall is always in service, keeping downtime to a minimum.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Upgrade both HA peers at the same time using Panorama’s "Group HA Peers"
❌ This causes simultaneous downtime, defeating the purpose of HA.
Not a recommended practice.
B. Suspend the active firewall, upgrade it first
❌ If you suspend and upgrade the active first, you risk unnecessary downtime if something goes wrong before the passive is ready.
C. Perform the upgrade on the active firewall first
❌ Not best practice. You always upgrade the passive first to ensure continuity of traffic.
📖 Reference:
Palo Alto Networks, Upgrade an Active/Passive HA Pair:
“Upgrade the passive peer first, verify its operation, then upgrade the active peer. This ensures traffic continuity and minimizes downtime.”
Question # 7
How can a firewall be set up to automatically block users as soon as they are found to
exhibit malicious behavior via a threat log? A. Configure a dynamic address group for the addresses to be blocked with the tag
"malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious"
tag to these addresses when logs are generated in the threat log. Under Device > User
Identification > Trusted Source Address, add the condition "NOT malicious."B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious."
Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these
users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this
user group.C. Configure the appropriate security profiles for Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, and Vulnerability
Prevention, create signature policies for the relevant signatures and/or severities. Under
the "Actions" tab in "Signature Policies," select "block-user."D. N/A
Reveal Answer
B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious."
Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these
users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this
user group.
Explanation:
To automatically block users exhibiting malicious behavior based on threat log entries in a Palo Alto Networks firewall, the solution must leverage dynamic user groups and log forwarding to tag and block users dynamically. The firewall’s User-ID feature, combined with Log Forwarding Profiles, allows tagging users based on threat log events (e.g., malware detection) and applying policies to block them.
Correct Answer
B. Configure a dynamic user group for the users to be blocked with the tag "malicious." Add a Log Forwarding profile to the other policies, which adds the "malicious" tag to these users when logs are generated in the threat log. Create policies to block traffic from this user group.:
Step 1: Create a dynamic user group under Objects > Dynamic User Groups with a match condition for the tag "malicious" (e.g., tag eq malicious). This group dynamically includes users tagged with "malicious" based on threat log events.
Step 2: Configure a Log Forwarding Profile under Objects > Log Forwarding, adding a match list for Threat logs (e.g., severity: critical, high) with an action to tag the source user with "malicious" (under User Tag > Tag).
Step 3: Attach the Log Forwarding Profile to relevant security policies under Policies > Security > Actions > Log Forwarding to trigger tagging when threats are detected.
Step 4: Create a security policy to block traffic from the dynamic user group (under Policies > Security, set Source User to the "malicious" dynamic user group, action: deny).
This setup ensures users are automatically tagged and blocked when malicious behavior is detected in threat logs (e.g., malware or exploits).
Example: A user downloading malware triggers a threat log, gets tagged "malicious," and is blocked by a deny policy.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect
A. Configure a dynamic address group for the addresses to be blocked with the tag "malicious." ... Under Device > User Identification > Trusted Source Address, add the condition "NOT malicious.":
While dynamic address groups can tag IP addresses, the question focuses on blocking users, not IPs. Additionally, Device > User Identification > Trusted Source Address does not exist in PAN-OS; User-ID configurations are under User Mapping or Dynamic User Groups, and "NOT malicious" is not a valid condition, making this option incorrect.
C. Configure the appropriate security profiles for Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, and Vulnerability Prevention, create signature policies for the relevant signatures and/or severities. Under the "Actions" tab in "Signature Policies," select "block-user.":
Security profiles (Antivirus, Anti-Spyware, Vulnerability Protection) define actions like block or alert for traffic, not users. There is no "Signature Policies" section or "block-user" action in PAN-OS security profiles. Blocking users requires User-ID and dynamic user groups, not signature-based actions, making this option invalid.
D. N/A:
This option implies no solution exists, which is incorrect since dynamic user groups with log forwarding provide a clear method to block users based on threat logs.
Technical Details
Configuration:
Create dynamic user group: Objects > Dynamic User Groups, set match to tag eq malicious.
Create Log Forwarding Profile: Objects > Log Forwarding, add match list for Threat logs, set action to tag user with "malicious".
Attach to security policy: Policies > Security > Actions > Log Forwarding.
Create block policy: Policies > Security, set Source User to the dynamic user group, action: deny.
CLI: set user-id dynamic-user-group match tag malicious, set log-settings profiles match-list log-type threat tag malicious.
Monitoring: Check tagged users in Monitor > Logs > User-ID or CLI (show user ip-user-mapping all).
Best Practice: Use specific threat severities (e.g., critical, high) in the Log Forwarding Profile to avoid over-tagging.
PCNSE Relevance
The PCNSE exam tests your ability to use User-ID and dynamic user groups for automated policy enforcement based on threat detection, a key feature for dynamic security responses.
References:
Palo Alto Networks Documentation (PAN-OS Admin Guide): Details dynamic user groups and log forwarding for tagging users based on threat logs.
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base (Article ID: 000068901): Clarifies dynamic user groups versus dynamic address groups for User-ID policies.
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.