Which plane on a Palo Alto Networks Firewall provides configuration, logging, and reporting functions on a separate processor?
Which plane on a Palo Alto Networks Firewall provides configuration, logging, and reporting functions on a separate processor?
The management plane on a Palo Alto Networks Firewall is responsible for configuration, logging, and reporting functions, which it performs on a separate processor. This segmentation helps in optimizing performance and maintaining dedicated resources for management tasks, ensuring efficient and secure firewall operations.
Answer A is Correct
A is Correct. Management plane = Log, Report, Configure Data Plane = AV, exploits, UF, Spyware, VPN, QoS, NAT, CC#, etc
A is correct. The Management plane will handle this.
Management LAN is on control Plan
A is correct
A is correct.
In all official content available the management plane doesn't exist. It is the control plane, this makes learning incredibly confusing
Correct Answer is A: App-ID Updates and Impact Firewall administrators must be careful before they install any App-ID updates because some applications might have changed since the last App-ID update (content update). For example, an application that previously was categorized under web-browsing now might be categorized under its own unique App-ID. Categorization of applications into more specific applications enables more granularity and control of applications within Security policy rules. Because the new App-ID no longer will be categorized as web-browsing, no Security policy rule now will contain this new App-ID. Consequently, the new App-ID will be blocked.
A is correct.
control plan (A)
Threat Intelligence Cloud Gathers, analyzes, correlates, and disseminates threats to and from the network and endpoints located within the network. Next-Generation Firewall Identifies and inspects all traffic to block known threats Advanced Endpoint Protection - Inspects processes and files to prevent known and unknown
A is correct
This is bug but C