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03-24-2017 01:33 PM - edited 03-24-2017 01:57 PM
Beginnings are not always perfect. Whether you started your Palo Alto Networks journey years ago or just recently, tell us what you learned early on that you wish you had known before.
If there was one thing, or maybe more, Live Community users would love to hear about it. Share your stories, your tips to help other users along the way.
Read a tip you like, make sure to like it or let them know by commenting!
The most popular and helpful stories will get you a cool new Live Community t-shirt!
Looking forward to reading all the great stories!
03-27-2017 12:53 AM
I wish i had known about this active and helpful comunity from the start. Do I get a t-shirt for posting first? 🙂
03-27-2017 01:19 AM
It is probably will be more as a feedback from my side but every time l am dealing with Palo issues, either it is through the TAC or community l always come across nice people. Didn't have any negative experience. All information really here and l would never believe that the community can be so helpful. Keep it up and thanks all!
p.s l also like this new t-shirt :0
03-27-2017 01:05 PM
I have less than a year experience, but I wish I had known to look in the "Unified" logs for the reasons things would be blocked. I've seen traffic allowed in the traffic logs but blocked because the file that was attempted to be downloaded wasn't of a permitted type. It was confusing at first when I saw the traffic permitted.
03-27-2017 02:19 PM
We love to hear that so thank you @santonic. I do think you deserve a t-shirt for posting first so stay tuned!
Keep posting!
Christine
03-28-2017 07:35 AM
The benefit of using the forums unless I actually need emergency support through TAC. A lot of the frontline support folks love to simply get your configuration and 'verify it for issues' when there really isn't a need for it; heck simply opening up a ticket for the weird URLs I was seeing on my botnet report the first line support was adimit that the predefined report was in some way misconfigured on my end.
In the past I've worked through issues soley by myself because I loathed contacting support and having to do the same troubleshooting steps I had already done multiple times, or hearing how I should try to restart in the middle of the day to fix the issue. In the forums it's by far more likely that you'll either get told the solution or be told to restart a specific process, instead of restarting the whole data/management plane.
03-30-2017 02:34 PM
I've been administrating a Palo Alto Firewall for 3 years now and think it's a really good tool, it friendly and faily easy to configure and manage. It has helped to improve our traffic controll and solve connection issues. I do encourage other administrators to use it!
03-30-2017 05:02 PM
i've been working with Cisco ASA before start using Palo Alto more than 4 years ago. since the first beginning i've appreciated the very friendly web interface and the huge amount of feature which are very helpful to manage our network and security.
especially indicated for corporate and sysadmins focused on the websecurity, you have a lot of automated and manual tools to prevent, detect properly attempts of breaches and vulnerabilities.
growing and growing version after version, i can't wait to see and test the 8 version.
03-31-2017 01:30 PM
If I knew then what I know now.....
1. Use Panorama for (almost) everything. Building all objects, profiles, zones, and policies in Panorama has numerous manageability/scalability benefits. Other than network interfaces, virtual routers, and IPSec tunnels, build everything else in Panorama and push it to the firewalls.
2. Use nested device groups in Panorama to create a hierarchy for shared security policies. This allows a single rule, created once, to be applied to multiple firewalls.
3. Template grouping should be based on device model do to zone limitations. Device grouping should be based on function or purpose.
4. Using tags, and corresponding colors, in your security rules helps with visual grouping the rules, and can also help with searching and filtering.
04-13-2017 10:30 AM
I'm about 2-months in, and I'm still looking for what I need to know.
What I most want is the "How to think Palo Alto" guide - the biggest picture of how the parts fit together, and the minute details of what little "other-guy" process or method doesn't work here.
I'll publish it myself once I think I have it 😉
04-13-2017 02:56 PM
And the WINNERS SO FAR ARE:
Published in LiveWeek 12 Friday April 7th 2017.
Your time to share - "What I wish I had known"
Community is all about sharing ideas and best practices. Whether you started your Palo Alto Networks journey years ago or just last month, your experience can really help others. Share your story with other Live users.
Thanks to @santonic, @DPoppleton, @BPry and @jjb3k for all the valuable insight - each user will receive the hot off the press Live Community t-shirt!
Keep sharing - more t-shirts to grab!
04-17-2017 08:56 AM
Do you need any info from me for the shirt?
04-17-2017 09:07 AM
Hi,
Beginning are always clumsy, but one of the first things I was impressed - community and knowledge base articles. I cannot stress enough how many times articles around here have helped me to get around some issues or simply get to know some feature.
Anyway, when I got into PA firewalling, it all looked nice and shiny and overall easy to deal with, so it felt good, but some things I've learned over time:
..and there are definitely other things, but as you see all of these are well described in Live community - you still have to find them though. 🙂
04-19-2017 12:24 AM
Thanx @carnould for the t-shirt! it arrived quickly! 🙂
04-19-2017 06:04 AM - edited 04-19-2017 06:05 AM
"What I wish I had known" that a complex administration appliance (Panorama) will help me in one or two clicks to apply configuration changes to almost 100 firewalls in a few seconds and not go firewall by firewall that used to take me a few hours, now it makes our company happier and more secure, quick example would be deploying an emergency content updated. WAY FASTER, thanks to Palo Alto Panorama :).
P.S: Almost all of my questions or steps by steps procedures (Like 80% of the time) are here in the community.
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