Network Security
Web Security: Objects
Table of Contents
Expand All
|
Collapse All
Network Security Docs
-
- Security Policy
-
- Security Profile Groups
- Security Profile: AI Security
- Security Profile: WildFire® Analysis
- Security Profile: Antivirus
- Security Profile: Vulnerability Protection
- Security Profile: Anti-Spyware
- Security Profile: DNS Security
- Security Profile: DoS Protection Profile
- Security Profile: File Blocking
- Security Profile: URL Filtering
- Security Profile: Data Filtering
- Security Profile: Zone Protection
-
- Policy Object: Address Groups
- Policy Object: Regions
- Policy Object: Traffic Objects
- Policy Object: Applications
- Policy Object: Application Groups
- Policy Object: Application Filter
- Policy Object: Services
- Policy Object: Auto-Tag Actions
- Policy Object: Devices
-
- Uses for External Dynamic Lists in Policy
- Formatting Guidelines for an External Dynamic List
- Built-in External Dynamic Lists
- Configure Your Environment to Access an External Dynamic List
- Configure your Environment to Access an External Dynamic List from the EDL Hosting Service
- Retrieve an External Dynamic List from the Web Server
- View External Dynamic List Entries
- Enforce Policy on an External Dynamic List
- Find External Dynamic Lists That Failed Authentication
- Disable Authentication for an External Dynamic List
- Policy Object: HIP Objects
- Policy Object: Schedules
- Policy Object: Quarantine Device Lists
- Policy Object: Dynamic User Groups
- Policy Object: Custom Objects
- Policy Object: Log Forwarding
- Policy Object: Authentication
- Policy Object: Decryption Profile
- Policy Object: Packet Broker Profile
-
-
-
- The Quantum Computing Threat
- How RFC 8784 Resists Quantum Computing Threats
- How RFC 9242 and RFC 9370 Resist Quantum Computing Threats
- Support for Post-Quantum Features
- Post-Quantum Migration Planning and Preparation
- Best Practices for Resisting Post-Quantum Attacks
- Learn More About Post-Quantum Security
-
-
-
- Investigate Reasons for Decryption Failure
- Identify Weak Protocols and Cipher Suites
- Troubleshoot Version Errors
- Troubleshoot Unsupported Cipher Suites
- Identify Untrusted CA Certificates
- Repair Incomplete Certificate Chains
- Troubleshoot Pinned Certificates
- Troubleshoot Expired Certificates
- Troubleshoot Revoked Certificates
Web Security: Objects
Objects here are supported for a web access Security policy. Web Security is part of your regular
configuration hierarchy, so you can reuse objects and profiles you've created.
Where Can I Use This? | What Do I Need? |
---|---|
|
|
Web Security Objects is where you’ll find the objects that are supported for a web access
Security policy. Because Web Security is part of your regular configuration hierarchy, you can
reuse objects and profiles you've created in your security rules.
To go to Web Security Objects, select ManageConfigurationNGFW and Prisma AccessSecurity ServicesWeb Security, and the select Objects tab.
Object | Helps you: |
---|---|
Device Posture | Specify a checklist of device categories and other device criteria for devices to
be evaluated against. Specify device categories that you want to be
able to enforce. |
Application Group with Control | Define your organization's applications and associated risks. Additionally, you can group a collection of applications to create Application Groups or Application Categories that require the same Security policy enforcement and simplifies administration of your rulebase by allowing you to update only the affected application group, rather than multiple security rules, when there is a change of applications you support. Create an Application Category to dynamically group applications based on application attributes that you define. This is useful when you want to safely enable access to applications that you do not explicitly sanction but want users to be able to access. |