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Palo Alto Networks Exam PCSFE Topic 5 Question 38 Discussion

Actual exam question for Palo Alto Networks's PCSFE exam
Question #: 38
Topic #: 5
[All PCSFE Questions]

Which element protects and hides an internal network in an outbound flow?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B, C

The two requirements for automating service deployment of a VM-Series firewall from an NSX Manager are:

Panorama has been configured to recognize both the NSX Manager and vCenter.

The deployed VM-Series firewall can establish communications with Panorama.

NSX Manager is a software component that provides centralized management and control of the NSX environment, including network virtualization, automation, and security. Service deployment is a process that involves deploying and configuring network services, such as firewalls, load balancers, or routers, on the NSX environment. VM-Series firewall is a virtualized version of the Palo Alto Networks next-generation firewall that can be deployed on various cloud or virtualization platforms, including NSX. Panorama is a centralized management server that provides visibility and control over multiple Palo Alto Networks firewalls and devices. Panorama has been configured to recognize both the NSX Manager and vCenter is a requirement for automating service deployment of a VM-Series firewall from an NSX Manager. vCenter is a software component that provides centralized management and control of the VMware environment, including hypervisors, virtual machines, and other resources. Panorama has been configured to recognize both the NSX Manager and vCenter by adding them as VMware service managers and enabling service insertion for VM-Series firewalls on NSX. This allows Panorama to communicate with the NSX Manager and vCenter, retrieve information about the NSX environment, and deploy and manage VM-Series firewalls as network services on the NSX environment. The deployed VM-Series firewall can establish communications with Panorama is a requirement for automating service deployment of a VM-Series firewall from an NSX Manager. The deployed VM-Series firewall can establish communications with Panorama by registering with Panorama using its serial number or IP address, and receiving configuration updates and policy rules from Panorama. This allows the VM-Series firewall to operate as part of the Panorama management domain, synchronize its settings and status with Panorama, and report its logs and statistics to Panorama. vCenter has been given Palo Alto Networks subscription licenses for VM-Series firewalls and Panorama can establish communications to the public Palo Alto Networks update servers are not requirements for automating service deployment of a VM-Series firewall from an NSX Manager, as those are not related or relevant factors for service deployment automation. Reference: [Palo Alto Networks Certified Software Firewall Engineer (PCSFE)], [Deploy the VM-Series Firewall on VMware NSX-T], [Panorama Overview], [VMware Service Manager], [Register the Firewall with Panorama]


Contribute your Thoughts:

Sharika
14 days ago
NAT all the way! Protecting my internal network is like a game of hide-and-seek, and NAT is the ultimate hiding spot.
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Julene
20 days ago
Gotta be NAT, unless this is some kind of trick question. I'm not falling for that!
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Fairy
28 days ago
I'm not sure, but I think it might be A) DNS sinkholing.
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Leslie
29 days ago
I agree with Cassie, NAT hides the internal network.
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Cassie
1 months ago
I think the answer is D) NAT.
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Gregoria
1 months ago
I'm going with NAT. Hiding the internal network is like a superpower, and NAT is the superhero we need.
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Shizue
2 days ago
I agree, NAT is like a superpower for network security.
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Elmira
4 days ago
NAT is definitely the superhero we need to hide our internal network.
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Lorrie
1 months ago
Hmm, NAT seems like the obvious choice here. I'm not sure the other options are even relevant.
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User-ID and App-ID are more about identifying users and applications, not protecting the network.
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Kimbery
2 days ago
DNS sinkholing is more about redirecting malicious traffic, not hiding the network.
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Nickolas
13 days ago
Yeah, NAT is commonly used for network security purposes.
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Johnna
15 days ago
I think NAT is the correct answer. It hides the internal network.
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Mose
1 months ago
Definitely NAT - it's the classic way to hide the internal network from the outside world.
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