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PCNSE Practice Test

At pcnsepracticetest.com, we offer expertly designed Palo Alto PCNSE practice test to help you gain the confidence and knowledge needed to pass the Palo Alto certified network security engineer exam on your first attempt. Our PCNSE exam questions are tailored to reflect the real exam experience, covering all critical topics such as firewall configuration, security policies, VPNs, threat prevention, and more.


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Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

Why are external zones required to be configured on a Palo Alto Networks NGFW in an environment with multiple virtual systems?
A. To allow traffic between zones in different virtual systems without the traffic leaving the appliance
B. To allow traffic between zones in different virtual systems while the traffic is leaving the appliance
C. External zones are required because the same external zone can be used on different virtual systems
D. Multiple external zones are required in each virtual system to allow the communications between virtual systems


B. To allow traffic between zones in different virtual systems while the traffic is leaving the appliance
Explanation:
In a multi-virtual system (vsys) environment, each vsys is a separate security domain with its own interfaces, zones, and policies. By design, vsys do not share internal state or have direct internal pathways for traffic. Therefore:
For traffic to flow from a zone in one vsys to a zone in another vsys, it must be routed out of the firewall (e.g., via a physical or VLAN interface) and then back in through another interface.
External zones are configured to represent these "outside" networks (e.g., a transit VLAN) that carry traffic between vsys. They are called "external" because the traffic leaves the physical appliance.
This approach ensures that inter-vsys traffic is subjected to the same security policies (e.g., security, NAT, decryption) as any other traffic traversing the firewall, maintaining security and visibility.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. To allow traffic between zones in different virtual systems without the traffic leaving the appliance:
This is false. Traffic between vsys must leave the appliance; there is no internal switching between vsys.
C. External zones are required because the same external zone can be used on different virtual systems:
While the same external zone name (e.g., "inter-vsys") can be configured in multiple vsys, this is not the primary reason. The key requirement is the need for traffic to exit and re-enter the firewall.
D. Multiple external zones are required in each virtual system to allow communications between virtual systems:
Only one external zone per vsys is typically needed for inter-vsys communication (e.g., a dedicated "inter-vsys" zone). Multiple zones are not required.

Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide:
The "Virtual Systems" chapter explains that inter-vsys traffic requires external zones because traffic must exit and re-enter the firewall. It details configuring zones for transit networks. PCNSE Exam Blueprint (Domain 1: Architecture and Core Concepts):
Understanding virtual system isolation and inter-vsys communication is a key architectural concept.




Question # 2

An engineer needs to configure a standardized template for all Panorama-managed firewalls. These settings will be configured on a template named "Global" and will be included in all template stacks. Which three settings can be configured in this template? (Choose three.)
A. Log Forwarding profile
B. SSL decryption exclusion
C. Email scheduler
D. Login banner
E. Dynamic updates


B. SSL decryption exclusion
D. Login banner
E. Dynamic updates
Explanation:
Templates in Panorama are used to configure Network and Device tab settings on managed firewalls. When creating a standardized template like “Global,” you’re defining base system-level configurations that apply across all devices in the stack. The following three settings are valid and supported within a Panorama template:

SSL Decryption Exclusion:
Configured under Device > Certificate Management > SSL Decryption Exclusion. This allows you to exclude specific sites or categories from SSL decryption globally. ✅ Valid template setting
Login Banner:
Set under Device > Setup > Management > General Settings. The login banner is a system-level message shown during CLI or GUI login and is managed via templates. ✅ Valid template setting
Dynamic Updates:
Managed under Device > Dynamic Updates. You can configure update schedules and sources for Antivirus, Threat, WildFire, and App-ID databases. ✅ Valid template setting
These are documented in Palo Alto’s Templates and Template Stacks guide.

❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Log Forwarding profile:
Log Forwarding profiles are configured under Objects > Log Forwarding, which is part of Device Groups, not Templates. Templates cannot manage policy-based objects like log forwarding.

C. Email Scheduler:
Email scheduler settings (used for reports and alerts) are part of Monitor > Reports and are managed via Device Groups or local firewall config—not via Templates.




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.


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

A threat intelligence team has requested more than a dozen Short signatures to be deployed on all perimeter Palo Alto Networks firewalls. How does the firewall engineer fulfill this request with the least time to implement?
A. Use Expedition to create custom vulnerability signatures, deploy them to Panorama using API and push them to the firewalls.
B. Create custom vulnerability signatures manually on one firewall export them, and then import them to the rest of the firewalls
C. Use Panorama IPs Signature Converter to create custom vulnerability signatures, and push them to the firewalls.
D. Create custom vulnerability signatures manually in Panorama, and push them to the firewalls


D. Create custom vulnerability signatures manually in Panorama, and push them to the firewalls
Explanation:
Panorama provides centralized management for custom vulnerability signatures (also known as "threat signatures"). To deploy multiple signatures quickly across all perimeter firewalls:
Create signatures in Panorama: Navigate to Objects > Custom Signatures in Panorama. Here, you can manually define the dozen+ signatures requested by the threat intelligence team.
Push to firewalls: Once created, these custom signatures are part of Panorama's shared objects. They can be pushed to all managed firewalls simultaneously through a standard policy commit from Panorama.
This approach is the most efficient because it avoids repetitive manual configuration on each firewall and leverages Panorama's central management capability.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Use Expedition:
Expedition is a migration tool for converting configurations from other vendors to PAN-OS. It is not designed for creating or deploying custom threat signatures.
B. Create manually on one firewall and export/import:
This is time-consuming and error-prone. It requires manual export/import for each firewall, which is inefficient for a large fleet.
C. Use Panorama IPS Signature Converter:
This tool converts signatures from other formats (e.g., Snort) to PAN-OS format. It is not for creating new custom signatures from scratch based on a team's request.

Reference:
PAN-OS documentation recommends using Panorama for centralized custom signature management to ensure consistency and reduce deployment time (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "Custom Signatures" section). Signatures created in Panorama are pushed to all associated firewalls during a commit.




Question # 5

A firewall engineer creates a NAT rule to translate IP address 1.1.1.10 to 192.168.1.10. The engineer also plans to enable DNS rewrite so that the firewall rewrites the IPv4 address in a DNS response based on the original destination IP address and translated destination IP address configured for the rule. The engineer wants the firewall to rewrite a DNS response of 1.1.1.10 to 192.168.1.10. What should the engineer do to complete the configuration?
A. Create a U-Turn NAT to translate the destination IP address 192.168.1.10 to 1.1.1.10 with the destination port equal to UDP/53.
B. Enable DNS rewrite under the destination address translation in the Translated Packet section of the NAT rule with the direction Forward.
C. Enable DNS rewrite under the destination address translation in the Translated Packet section of the NAT rule with the direction Reverse.
D. Create a U-Turn NAT to translate the destination IP address 1.1.1.10 to 192.168.1.10 with the destination port equal to UDP/53.


B. Enable DNS rewrite under the destination address translation in the Translated Packet section of the NAT rule with the direction Forward.
Explanation:

The engineer wants the firewall to rewrite a DNS response of 1.1.1.10 to 192.168.1.10, which means the IP address in the DNS response matches the original destination address in the NAT rule. Therefore, the correct DNS rewrite direction is:
Forward — translates the IP in the DNS response using the same translation as the NAT rule.

To implement this:
Go to Policies > NAT and edit the NAT rule.
In the Translated Packet section:
Set Translation Type to Static IP
Enter the Translated Address (192.168.1.10)
Enable DNS Rewrite
Set Direction to Forward
Commit the changes.
📘 Palo Alto Networks – Configure Destination NAT with DNS Rewrite




Question # 6

A consultant advises a client on designing an explicit Web Proxy deployment on PAN-OS 11 0 The client currently uses RADIUS authentication in their environment. Which two pieces of information should the consultant provide regarding Web Proxy authentication? (Choose two.)
A. Kerberos or SAML authentication need to be configured
B. LDAP or TACACS+ authentication need to be configured
C. RADIUS is only supported for a transparent Web Proxy.
D. RADIUS is not supported for explicit or transparent Web Proxy


A. Kerberos or SAML authentication need to be configured
D. RADIUS is not supported for explicit or transparent Web Proxy
Explanation:
PAN-OS 11.0 explicit Web Proxy supports only Kerberos, SAML, and Cloud Identity Engine for authentication. RADIUS is not supported for either explicit or transparent proxy modes.

A. Kerberos or SAML authentication need to be configured
✔️ Correct — These are the supported methods for explicit proxy authentication in PAN-OS 11.0 Reference:
Palo Alto TechDocs – Configure Authentication for Explicit Web Proxy
D. RADIUS is not supported for explicit or transparent Web Proxy
✔️ Correct — RADIUS is not a supported authentication method for either proxy mode

❌ Incorrect Options:
B. LDAP or TACACS+ authentication need to be configured
❌ LDAP/TACACS+ are not supported for Web Proxy authentication in PAN-OS 11.0
C. RADIUS is only supported for a transparent Web Proxy
❌ Misleading — RADIUS is not supported for transparent proxy either




Question # 7

An enterprise Information Security team has deployed policies based on AD groups to restrict user access to critical infrastructure systems. However, a recent phishing campaign against the organization has prompted Information Security to look for more controls that can secure access to critical assets. For users that need to access these systems. Information Security wants to use PAN-OS multi-factor authentication (MFA) integration to enforce MFA. What should the enterprise do to use PAN-OS MFA?
A. Configure a Captive Portal authentication policy that uses an authentication sequence.
B. Configure a Captive Portal authentication policy that uses an authentication profile that references a RADIUS profile.
C. Create an authentication profile and assign another authentication factor to be used by a Captive Portal authentication policy.
D. Use a Credential Phishing agent to detect, prevent, and mitigate credential phishing campaigns.


C. Create an authentication profile and assign another authentication factor to be used by a Captive Portal authentication policy.
Explanation:
To enforce multi-factor authentication (MFA) for users accessing critical infrastructure, Palo Alto Networks firewalls use Authentication Policies in conjunction with Captive Portal. The correct approach involves:
Creating an Authentication Profile for the first factor (e.g., LDAP, RADIUS).
Adding an MFA Server Profile for the second factor (e.g., via vendor API or RADIUS).
Configuring a Captive Portal Authentication Policy that references both profiles.

This setup allows the firewall to:
Redirect users to a web form for initial authentication.
Trigger additional authentication factors via integrated MFA services.
Dynamically enforce access control based on user identity and authentication status.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Configure a Captive Portal authentication policy that uses an authentication sequence Authentication sequences are used for fallback across multiple profiles—not for MFA chaining.
B. Configure a Captive Portal authentication policy that uses an authentication profile that references a RADIUS profile This only handles single-factor authentication unless combined with an MFA server profile.
D. Use a Credential Phishing agent to detect, prevent, and mitigate credential phishing campaigns This is a separate feature for threat detection—not for enforcing MFA.

🔗 Authoritative Reference:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Configure Multi-Factor Authentication



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.