Book Image

Mastering Palo Alto Networks

By : Tom Piens aka Piens aka 'reaper'
Book Image

Mastering Palo Alto Networks

By: Tom Piens aka Piens aka 'reaper'

Overview of this book

To safeguard against security threats, it is crucial to ensure that your organization is effectively secured across networks, mobile devices, and the cloud. Palo Alto Networks’ integrated platform makes it easy to manage network and cloud security along with endpoint protection and a wide range of security services. With this book, you'll understand Palo Alto Networks and learn how to implement essential techniques, right from deploying firewalls through to advanced troubleshooting. The book starts by showing you how to set up and configure the Palo Alto Networks firewall, helping you to understand the technology and appreciate the simple, yet powerful, PAN-OS platform. Once you've explored the web interface and command-line structure, you'll be able to predict expected behavior and troubleshoot anomalies with confidence. You'll learn why and how to create strong security policies and discover how the firewall protects against encrypted threats. In addition to this, you'll get to grips with identifying users and controlling access to your network with user IDs and even prioritize traffic using quality of service (QoS). The book will show you how to enable special modes on the firewall for shared environments and extend security capabilities to smaller locations. By the end of this network security book, you'll be well-versed with advanced troubleshooting techniques and best practices recommended by an experienced security engineer and Palo Alto Networks expert.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Section 1: First Steps and Basic Configuration
4
Section 2: Advanced Configuration and Putting the Features to Work
10
Section 3: Maintenance and Troubleshooting

Configuring log forwarding

The firewall will not automatically forward all logs to Panorama or Logging Service. Log forwarding needs to be configured and assigned to specific logs or log types before anything is sent out. There are two main types of logs that can be forwarded:

  • System event logs
  • Traffic flow-related logs

Device daemon-related logs are only stored locally.

Important note

Only logs that are being stored locally can be forwarded. Any rule, policy, or profile that is set to not log also cannot generate logs to be forwarded. Forwarded logs will also remain available locally (for as long as storage is available); they are not purged after being forwarded.

In the firewall, you can check whether log forwarding is available and working with the following commands:

> request log-collector-forwarding status
> request logging-service-forwarding status

Let's first take a look at the system logs

System logs

In Device | Log Settings...