Question # 1
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 # 2
An engineer troubleshoots a high availability (HA) link that is unreliable.
Where can the engineer view what time the interface went down? A. Monitor > Logs > System
B. Device > High Availability > Active/Passive Settings
C. Monitor > Logs > Traffic
D. Dashboard > Widgets > High Availability
Reveal Answer
A. Monitor > Logs > System
Explanation:
When troubleshooting an unreliable High Availability (HA) link on a Palo Alto Networks firewall, the most accurate way to determine when the interface went down is by reviewing the System logs. These logs capture all system-level events, including HA state transitions, link failures, and interface status changes with precise timestamps.
To access this:
Go to Monitor > Logs > System
Apply filters such as eventid contains ha or description contains link down to isolate relevant entries
System logs provide detailed information about the exact time and nature of the HA link failure, which is essential for root cause analysis and correlating with other network events.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. Device > High Availability > Active/Passive Settings This section is used to configure HA behavior (e.g., link monitoring, failover conditions), but it does not show historical events or timestamps of interface failures.
C. Monitor > Logs > Traffic Traffic logs record session-level data such as source/destination IPs, applications, and bytes transferred. They do not log interface status changes or HA link failures.
D. Dashboard > Widgets > High Availability The HA widget displays the current HA status (e.g., active/passive, sync status), but it does not retain historical data or show when an interface went down.
🔗 Valid References:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Monitor System Logs
Palo Alto Networks Knowledge Base: How to Troubleshoot HA Link Failures
ITExamSolutions PCNSE Practice: HA Link Troubleshooting
Question # 3
Refer to the exhibit.
Which will be the egress interface if the traffic's ingress interface is ethernet1/7 sourcing
from 192.168.111.3 and to the destination 10.46.41.113? A. ethernet1/6
B. ethernet1/3
C. ethernet1/7
D. ethernet1/5
Reveal Answer
D. ethernet1/5
Explanation:
1. Understanding the Traffic Flow
Ingress Interface: ethernet1/7 (Virtual Wire member, as seen in show virtual-wire all).
Source IP: 192.168.111.3 (part of subnet 192.168.111.0/24, locally attached to ethernet1/6).
Destination IP: 10.46.41.113 (routed via 10.46.40.1 on ethernet1/3, per the FIB table).
2. Virtual Wire Behavior
The show virtual-wire all output shows:
VW-1 binds ethernet1/7 (ingress) to ethernet1/5 (egress).
Flags: p (link state pass-through), meaning traffic bypasses Layer 3 routing.
Critical Point: Virtual Wire interfaces forward traffic directly between paired interfaces without routing.
3. Why Not Other Options?
A. ethernet1/6 → Incorrect. This is the L3 interface for 192.168.111.0/24, but traffic enters via Virtual Wire (ethernet1/7).
B. ethernet1/3 → Incorrect. This is the L3 egress for 10.46.41.113, but Virtual Wire bypasses routing.
C. ethernet1/7 → Incorrect. This is the ingress interface, not egress.
4. Key Takeaway
Virtual Wire (transparent mode) forwards traffic at Layer 2 between paired interfaces. Since ethernet1/7 is paired with ethernet1/5, traffic exits via ethernet1/5.
Reference:
Palo Alto Admin Guide (Virtual Wire):
Virtual Wire interfaces do not participate in routing; traffic flows directly between paired interfaces.
Question # 4
A company uses GlobalProtect for its VPN and wants to allow access to users who have
only an endpoint solution installed. Which sequence of configuration steps will allow access
only for hosts that have antivirus or anti-spyware enabled? A. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes. *
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Portal
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source HIP
profile. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.B. Create Security Profiles for Antivirus and Anti-Spyware.
Create Security Profile Group that includes the Antivirus and Anti-Spyware profiles. Enable
GlobalProtect Portal Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that
matches source device object. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.C. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes.
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source device
object. Enable GlobalProtect Portal Agent for HIP Notification.D. Create Security Profiles for Antivirus and Anti-Spyware.
Create Security Profile Group that includes the Antivirus and Anti-Spyware profile. Enable
GlobalProtect Gateway Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that
has the Profile Setting. Profile Type selected to Group. Enable GlobalProtect Portal Agent
for HIP Notification.
Reveal Answer
A. Create a HIP object with Anti-Malware enabled and Real Time Protection set to yes. *
Create a HIP Profile that matches the HIP object criteria. Enable GlobalProtect Portal
Agent to collect HIP Data Collection. Create a Security policy that matches source HIP
profile. Enable GlobalProtect Gateway Agent for HIP Notification.
Explanation:
To restrict GlobalProtect VPN access to endpoints with antivirus or anti-spyware installed, the administrator must use Host Information Profile (HIP) checks. The correct sequence involves:
1.Create a HIP Object
Navigate to Objects > GlobalProtect > HIP Objects
Enable Anti-Malware and set Real-Time Protection = Yes
This ensures only endpoints with active antivirus/anti-spyware are matched
2.Create a HIP Profile
Go to Objects > GlobalProtect > HIP Profiles
Reference the HIP Object created above
This profile defines the matching logic for compliant endpoints
3.Enable HIP Data Collection on the Portal Agent Config
Under Network > GlobalProtect > Portals > Agent > Data Collection
This allows the GlobalProtect client to send endpoint posture data
4.Enable HIP Notification on the Gateway Agent Config
Under Network > GlobalProtect > Gateways > Agent > HIP Notification
This ensures the gateway receives and processes HIP data
Create a Security Policy referencing the HIP Profile
5.Create a Security Policy referencing the HIP Profile
Use the Source HIP Profile match criteria to allow access only to compliant hosts
This workflow is validated in Palo Alto’s HIP Objects Anti-Malware documentation and the GlobalProtect Administrator’s Guide.
❌ Why other options are incorrect
B and D: These refer to Security Profiles (Antivirus, Anti-Spyware), which are used for threat prevention—not for endpoint posture checks. They don’t control access based on endpoint state.
C: Reverses the Portal and Gateway HIP configuration steps. HIP data collection must be enabled on the Portal, and notification must be enabled on the Gateway—not the other way around.
Question # 5
An administrator is attempting to create policies tor deployment of a device group and
template stack. When creating the policies, the zone drop down list does not include the
required zone.
What must the administrator do to correct this issue? A. Specify the target device as the master device in the device groupB. Enable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" in Panorama
settingsC. Add the template as a reference template in the device groupD. Add a firewall to both the device group and the template
Reveal Answer
C. Add the template as a reference template in the device group
Explanation:
In Panorama, when creating policies for a device group and template stack, the zone dropdown list will only show zones that are defined in the template and associated with a firewall. If no firewall is added to both the device group and the template, Panorama cannot correlate the zone definitions with a real device, and the dropdown will appear incomplete.
To fix this:
Ensure that the firewall is added to both:
The device group (for policy management)
The template (for interface and zone definitions)
This allows Panorama to correctly populate zone objects in the policy editor.
❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Specify the target device as the master device in the device group This is used for reference configuration comparison, not for zone population.
B. Enable "Share Unused Address and Service Objects with Devices" This affects object sharing, not zone visibility.
C. Add the template as a reference template in the device group Reference templates are used for inheritance, not for linking zones to policies.
🔗 Reference:
Exam4Training PCNSE Question
Palo Alto Networks KB: New Zone Not Visible in Panorama
Question # 6
Which statement accurately describes how web proxy is run on a firewall with multiple
virtual systems? A. It can run on a single virtual system and multiple virtual systems.
B. It can run on multiple virtual systems without issue.
C. It can run only on a single virtual system.
D. It can run only on a virtual system with an alias named "web proxy.
Reveal Answer
A. It can run on a single virtual system and multiple virtual systems.
Explanation:
In a Palo Alto Networks NGFW configured with multiple virtual systems (vsys), each vsys operates as an independent firewall instance. To enable inter-vsys communication—that is, traffic flowing between zones in different vsys without leaving the physical appliance—you must configure an external zone.
Here’s how it works:
An external zone is a special type of zone that represents another vsys within the same firewall.
It’s not tied to any interface, unlike regular zones.
It allows traffic to be routed internally between vsys, enabling policy enforcement and App-ID inspection across virtual boundaries.
Each vsys can have only one external zone, and it must be explicitly configured to allow traffic to/from another vsys.
This setup is essential for scenarios like shared services, centralized logging, or inter-vsys segmentation where traffic should remain inside the appliance.
❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
B. While the traffic is leaving the appliance → Incorrect. External zones are specifically designed to keep traffic inside the firewall.
C. Same external zone used on different vsys → Misleading. Each vsys must define its own external zone; they are not shared across vsys.
D. Multiple external zones per vsys → Invalid. A vsys can have only one external zone, by design2.
📚 References:
Palo Alto Networks – External Zone Configuration
PCNSE Guide – Role of External Zones in Multi-VSYS Environments
Question # 7
A company has configured a URL Filtering profile with override action on their firewall.
Which two profiles are needed to complete the configuration? (Choose two) A. SSL/TLS ServiceB. HTTP ServerC. DecryptionD. Interface Management
Reveal Answer
A. SSL/TLS ServiceC. Decryption
Explanation:
To properly implement URL Filtering with override actions, the firewall must inspect encrypted (HTTPS) traffic. This requires:
A. SSL/TLS Service Profile
Defines which SSL/TLS versions and cipher suites are allowed.
Ensures the firewall can properly decrypt and inspect traffic.
C. Decryption Profile
Specifies decryption rules (e.g., forward trust, forward untrust).
Required for SSL decryption, which is necessary for URL Filtering to analyze HTTPS traffic.
Why the Others Are Incorrect:
B. HTTP Server Profile → Used for firewall management access (GUI/API), not URL Filtering.
D. Interface Management Profile → Controls management access to interfaces, unrelated to decryption.
Reference:
Palo Alto URL Filtering with Decryption
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.