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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.


Why Choose Us?


1. Exam-Aligned Questions: Our PCNSE practice exam is based on the latest exam objectives, ensuring you’re prepared for what’s on the actual exam.
2. Detailed Feedback: Get clear explanations for every Palo Alto certified network security engineer exam question to deepen your knowledge and learn from mistakes.
3. Track Your Progress: Monitor your performance over time and focus on areas that need improvement.
4. Flexible Practice: Study anytime, anywhere, and at your own pace with our user-friendly platform.


Palo Alto PCNSE Practice Exam Questions



Question # 1

If a URL is in multiple custom URL categories with different actions, which action will take priority?
A. Allow
B. Override
C. Block
D. Alert


C. Block
Explanation:
When a URL matches multiple custom URL categories with different actions configured, Palo Alto Networks firewalls employ a precedence hierarchy to determine the action. The action with the highest priority is Block.

The priority order from highest to lowest is:
Block (highest priority)
Override
Allow
Continue (lowest priority, inherits action from the parent category)
Therefore, if a URL is in one custom category set to allow and another set to block, the block action will take precedence and the traffic will be denied.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Allow:
This is a lower priority action than block or override. It will be overridden if a block action exists in another matching category.
B. Override:
This is a high-priority action (second only to block), used to force a site to render in a specific way (e.g., forcing YouTube to "safe mode"). However, it is still superseded by a block action.
D. Alert:
This is not a standard action for URL filtering. The primary actions are allow, block, override, and continue. "Alert" is typically an action in security profiles (like Threat or Data Filtering) for logging without blocking, but it is not part of the URL Filtering action precedence hierarchy.

Valid Reference:
Palo Alto Networks Administrator Guide | URL Filtering | Best Practices | URL Category Precedence: The official documentation explicitly states the order of precedence for URL filtering actions when multiple categories match. The hierarchy is: Block > Override > Allow > Continue. This ensures that the most restrictive policy is always enforced.




Question # 2

Which two components are required to configure certificate-based authentication to the web Ul when an administrator needs firewall access on a trusted interface'? (Choose two.)
A. Server certificate
B. SSL/TLS Service Profile
C. Certificate Profile
D. CA certificate


C. Certificate Profile
D. CA certificate
Explanation:
To configure certificate-based authentication for administrator access to the web UI on a trusted interface, two key components are required:

✅ C. Certificate Profile
This profile defines how the firewall validates client certificates.
It specifies the CA certificate used to verify the client certificate and maps certificate fields (e.g., Subject) to usernames.
Configured under Device > Certificate Management > Certificate Profile.

✅ D. CA Certificate
This is the root or intermediate certificate that signed the administrator’s client certificate.
It must be imported or generated on the firewall and added to the Certificate Profile.
Used to validate the authenticity of the client certificate during login.

❌ Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Server Certificate Required for SSL/TLS encryption, not for client certificate authentication. It secures the web UI but doesn’t validate admin identity.
B. SSL/TLS Service Profile Used to bind the server certificate to the web interface. It’s necessary for HTTPS access but not directly involved in certificate-based authentication logic.

🔗 Valid References:
Palo Alto Networks TechDocs: Configure Certificate-Based Administrator Authentication to the Web Interface
Pass4Success PCNSE Discussion: Certificate-Based Authentication Requirements




Question # 3

A network security administrator wants to begin inspecting bulk user HTTPS traffic flows egressing out of the internet edge firewall. Which certificate is the best choice to configure as an SSL Forward Trust certificate?
A. A self-signed Certificate Authority certificate generated by the firewall
B. A Machine Certificate for the firewall signed by the organization's PKI
C. A web server certificate signed by the organization's PKI
D. A subordinate Certificate Authority certificate signed by the organization's PKI


D. A subordinate Certificate Authority certificate signed by the organization's PKI
Explanation:

Why a Subordinate CA Certificate?
1.SSL Forward Proxy Trust Model:
The firewall acts as a man-in-the-middle (MITM) for HTTPS traffic.
It generates dynamic certificates for websites visited by users.
These dynamic certificates must be signed by a Certificate Authority (CA) that is trusted by all clients.

2.Benefits of a Subordinate CA:
Signed by the organization's root PKI: Already trusted by all domain-joined clients.
Delegated authority: Allows the firewall to issue certificates without involving the root CA.
Security best practice: Limits exposure of the root CA.

Why Not Other Options?
A. Self-signed CA
Not inherently trusted by clients—requires manual installation on every device.
B. Machine Certificate
Used for firewall identity (e.g., management), not signing dynamic certificates.
C. Web Server Certificate
Issued to servers, not for signing other certificates.

Deployment Steps:
Generate a subordinate CA certificate from the organization’s PKI.
Import it on the firewall under Device > Certificate Management > Certificates.
Reference it in the Decryption Profile (Forward Trust Certificate).

Reference:
Palo Alto Decryption Best Practices:
"Use a subordinate CA from your enterprise PKI as the forward trust certificate for seamless client trust."




Question # 4

SSL Forward Proxy decryption is configured, but the firewall uses Untrusted-CA to sign the website https://www important-website com certificate, End-users are receiving the "security certificate is no: trusted” warning, Without SSL decryption, the web browser shows chat the website certificate is trusted and signet by well-known certificate chain Well-Known-intermediate and Wako Hebe CA Security administrator who represents the customer requires the following two behaviors when SSL Forward Proxy is enabled:
1. End-users must not get the warning for the https:///www.very-import-website.com/ website.
2. End-users should get the warning for any other untrusted website.
Which approach meets the two customer requirements?
A. Install the Well-Known-intermediate-CA and Well:Known Root-CA certificates on all enduser systems in the user and local computer stores:
B. Clear the Forward Untrust-CA Certificate check box on the Untrusted-CA certificate= and commit the configuration
C. Navigate to Device > Certificate Management > Certificates > Default Trusted Certificate Authorities, import Well-Known-Intermediate-CA 2nd Well-Known-Root-CA select the Trusted Root CA check box, aid commit the configuration.
D. Navigate to Device > Certificate Management > Certificates > Device Certificates, import Well-known-Intermediate-CA and Well-Know5-Root-CA, Select the Trusted Root CA check box, and commit the configuration.


C. Navigate to Device > Certificate Management > Certificates > Default Trusted Certificate Authorities, import Well-Known-Intermediate-CA 2nd Well-Known-Root-CA select the Trusted Root CA check box, aid commit the configuration.
Explanation:
To meet both customer requirements under SSL Forward Proxy decryption, the firewall must:

1.Trust the certificate chain of https:
//www.very-important-website.com so it can re-sign the certificate using the Forward Trust CA (not the Untrusted CA).
2.Continue using the Forward Untrust CA
for any other site with an untrusted certificate chain, so users still receive warnings for those.

The correct way to achieve this is:
Import the Well-Known Intermediate CA and Well-Known Root CA into the Default Trusted Certificate Authorities store.
Mark them as Trusted Root CAs.
This allows the firewall to recognize the original server certificate as trusted, and therefore use the Forward Trust CA to re-sign it for the client.
Other sites with untrusted chains will still trigger the Forward Untrust CA, preserving the warning behavior.
This approach aligns with Palo Alto Networks’ best practices for selective trust handling during SSL decryption.

❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Install the Well-Known CAs on end-user systems
→ This does not affect how the firewall signs certificates. The issue is with the firewall using the Untrusted CA, not the client rejecting a valid cert.
B. Clear the Forward Untrust-CA Certificate check box
→ This disables the firewall’s ability to warn users about truly untrusted sites, violating requirement #2.
D. Import into Device Certificates
→ Device Certificates are used for firewall identity and authentication, not for trust evaluation of external server certificates.

📚 Reference:
Configure SSL Forward Proxy – PAN-OS Admin Guide
Knowledge Base – Access Fails with Certificate Error When SSL Forward Proxy is Enabled




Question # 5

A new application server 192.168.197.40 has been deployed in the DMZ. There are no public IP addresses available resulting in the server sharing MAT IP 198 51 100 B8 with another OMZ serve that uses IP address 192 168 19? 60 Firewall security and NAT rules have been configured The application team has confirmed mat the new server is able to establish a secure connection to an external database with IP address 203.0.113.40. The database team reports that they are unable to establish a secure connection to 196 51 100 88 from 203.0.113.40 However it confirm a successful prig test to 198 51 100 88 Referring to the MAT configuration and traffic logs provided how can the firewall engineer resolve the situation and ensure inbound and outbound connections work concurrently for both DMZ servers?
A. Replace the two NAT rules with a single rule that has both DMZ servers as "Source Address." both external servers as "Destination Address." and Source Translation remaining as is with bidirectional option enabled
B. Sharing a single NAT IP is possible for outbound connectivity not for inbound, therefore, a new public IP address must be obtained for the new DMZ server and used in the NAT rule 6 DMZ server 2.
C. Configure separate source NAT and destination NAT rules for the two DMZ servers without using the bidirectional option.
D. Move the NAT rule 6 DMZ server 2 above NAT rule 5 DMZ server 1.


C. Configure separate source NAT and destination NAT rules for the two DMZ servers without using the bidirectional option.
Explanation:
Let's analyze the provided information and the core problem.

The Scenario:
Two servers in the DMZ: 192.168.197.60 (Server 1) and 192.168.197.40 (Server 2).
One public IP (198.51.100.88) is shared for both servers.
Outbound works: Both servers can initiate connections to the external database (203.0.113.40). This is handled by the first two NAT rules (Source NAT).
Inbound fails: The external database (203.0.113.40) cannot initiate a connection back to 198.51.100.88. This is the problem.

Why Inbound Fails: The "Hairpin" NAT Problem
The provided NAT rules are bidirectional (implied by the structure, a single rule handling both directions). For inbound traffic, the firewall sees a packet destined for its public IP (198.51.100.88). It needs to know which internal server (192.168.197.60 or 192.168.197.40) to send it to.
A single bidirectional NAT rule using a shared IP cannot make this decision. There is no information in the inbound packet (from 203.0.113.40 to 198.51.100.88) that tells the firewall which internal host is the intended recipient. This is a classic limitation of overloading a single IP for multiple hosts without a differentiating factor like destination port (which is any in this case).

The Solution: Decoupling NAT
The solution is to break the single, ambiguous bidirectional rule into two separate, explicit rules:
Source NAT Rules (Outbound): Keep the two existing outbound rules. These handle traffic originating from the DMZ servers. The firewall can easily identify the correct source IP to translate to based on the originating internal IP.
Destination NAT Rules (Inbound): Create two new, separate Destination NAT (DNAT) rules. These rules are placed in a different rulebase and are evaluated based on the destination of the incoming packet.
Rule A: If destination IP is 198.51.100.88 and destination port is [Port used by Server 1], then translate destination to 192.168.197.60.
Rule B: If destination IP is 198.51.100.88 and destination port is [Port used by Server 2], then translate destination to 192.168.197.40. By using the destination port (which the application team must define), the firewall now has the critical information needed to disambiguate the inbound traffic and send it to the correct server. The "bidirectional" option is not used; outbound is handled by Source NAT rules, and inbound is handled by completely separate Destination NAT rules.

Detailed Analysis of the Other Options:
A. Replace the two NAT rules with a single rule... with bidirectional option enabled.
Why it's wrong: This makes the problem worse, not better. Combining the rules into one giant rule still suffers from the same fundamental flaw: the firewall cannot determine the correct destination for an inbound connection. The bidirectional option depends on a unique public:private IP mapping, which is impossible here as the mapping is 1:2.

B. Sharing a single NAT IP is possible for outbound connectivity not for inbound...
Why it's wrong: While this statement is partially true for this specific case (with any service), it is not the correct answer. It is absolutely possible to share a single IP for inbound connectivity using port-based Destination NAT (as described in solution C). This is how web hosting companies run multiple HTTPS sites (port 443) on a single IP—they can't, they use SNI, but the NAT concept is similar for other protocols. The answer suggests giving up instead of implementing the correct technical solution.

D. Move the NAT rule 6 DMZ server 2 above NAT rule 5 DMZ server 1.
Why it's wrong: The order of NAT rules is crucial, but it has no effect on this problem. The issue is not the evaluation order of the outbound rules; it's the fundamental inability of the inbound evaluation to choose between two internal hosts. Reordering two identically flawed rules does not fix the flaw.

PCNSE Exam Reference & Key Takeaway:
Core Concept: Understand the difference and use cases for Source NAT vs. Destination NAT. Bidirectional NAT is simple but requires a 1:1 IP mapping.
NAT Order of Operations:Know that Destination NAT rules are processed before Security policies, and Source NAT rules are processed after Security policies (on egress). This question hinges on the need for a specific Destination NAT rule.
Troubleshooting: Use tools like show session all and the traffic logs to see the pre- and post-NAT IP addresses, which would clearly show the inbound packet being dropped because no DNAT rule exists to translate 198.51.100.88 to a specific private IP.
Real-World Application: This is a very common scenario. The correct design is to use separate DNAT rules that include destination port to uniquely identify the service on each server behind the shared IP.




Question # 6

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


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.




Question # 7

A firewall engineer creates a destination static NAT rule to allow traffic from the internet to a webserver hosted behind the edge firewall. The pre-NAT IP address of the server is 153.6 12.10, and the post-NAT IP address is 192.168.10.10. Refer to the routing and interfaces information below.

What should the NAT rule destination zone be set to?
A. None
B. Outside
C. DMZ
D. Inside


B. Outside
Explanation:
For destination NAT (allowing internet traffic to an internal server), the firewall evaluates the NAT rule based on the pre-NAT (original) packet headers. The destination zone in the NAT rule must match the zone of the interface where the traffic enters the firewall.
The internet-sourced traffic arrives on the outside interface (e.g., ethernet1/3 in the routing table, which has the default route to 207.212.10.1).
The pre-NAT destination IP is 192.168.10.10 (the public IP), but the zone is determined by the ingress interface (outside), not the IP.
Thus, the NAT rule’s destination zone must be set to Outside to match the incoming traffic.

Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. None:
Using "None" disables zone matching, which is insecure and not recommended. The rule should explicitly match the ingress zone for predictability.
C. DMZ:
This would only apply if traffic entered a DMZ interface, but the routing table shows the default route (internet traffic) uses ethernet1/3 (outside zone).
D. Inside:
This is the zone for the internal network (post-NAT). NAT rules are evaluated based on pre-NAT traffic, which arrives from the outside.

Reference:
PAN-OS NAT rule processing:
Destination NAT rules are matched using original packet headers (pre-NAT destination IP and ingress zone). The destination zone must be the zone of the interface where external traffic is received (PAN-OS Administrator’s Guide, "NAT Rule Evaluation" section).



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.