Actions Supported on Applications
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- Objects > Addresses
- Objects > Address Groups
- Objects > Regions
- Objects > Dynamic User Groups
- Objects > Application Groups
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- Objects > Services
- Objects > Service Groups
- Objects > Devices
- Objects > External Dynamic Lists
- Objects > Custom Objects > Spyware/Vulnerability
- Objects > Custom Objects > URL Category
- Objects > Security Profiles > Antivirus
- Objects > Security Profiles > Anti-Spyware Profile
- Objects > Security Profiles > Vulnerability Protection
- Objects > Security Profiles > File Blocking
- Objects > Security Profiles > WildFire Analysis
- Objects > Security Profiles > Data Filtering
- Objects > Security Profiles > DoS Protection
- Objects > Security Profiles > Mobile Network Protection
- Objects > Security Profiles > SCTP Protection
- Objects > Security Profile Groups
- Objects > Log Forwarding
- Objects > Authentication
- Objects > Decryption > Forwarding Profile
- Objects > Schedules
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- Firewall Interfaces Overview
- Common Building Blocks for Firewall Interfaces
- Common Building Blocks for PA-7000 Series Firewall Interfaces
- Tap Interface
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- Virtual Wire Interface
- Virtual Wire Subinterface
- PA-7000 Series Layer 2 Interface
- PA-7000 Series Layer 2 Subinterface
- PA-7000 Series Layer 3 Interface
- Layer 3 Interface
- Layer 3 Subinterface
- Log Card Interface
- Log Card Subinterface
- Decrypt Mirror Interface
- Aggregate Ethernet (AE) Interface Group
- Aggregate Ethernet (AE) Interface
- Network > Interfaces > VLAN
- Network > Interfaces > Loopback
- Network > Interfaces > Tunnel
- Network > Interfaces > SD-WAN
- Network > VLANs
- Network > Virtual Wires
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- Network > Network Profiles > GlobalProtect IPSec Crypto
- Network > Network Profiles > IPSec Crypto
- Network > Network Profiles > IKE Crypto
- Network > Network Profiles > Monitor
- Network > Network Profiles > Interface Mgmt
- Network > Network Profiles > QoS
- Network > Network Profiles > LLDP Profile
- Network > Network Profiles > SD-WAN Interface Profile
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- Device > Setup
- Device > Setup > Management
- Device > Setup > Interfaces
- Device > Setup > Telemetry
- Device > Setup > Content-ID
- Device > Setup > WildFire
- Device > Setup > DLP
- Device > Log Forwarding Card
- Device > Config Audit
- Device > Administrators
- Device > Admin Roles
- Device > Access Domain
- Device > Authentication Sequence
- Device > Device Quarantine
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- Security Policy Match
- QoS Policy Match
- Authentication Policy Match
- Decryption/SSL Policy Match
- NAT Policy Match
- Policy Based Forwarding Policy Match
- DoS Policy Match
- Routing
- Test Wildfire
- Threat Vault
- Ping
- Trace Route
- Log Collector Connectivity
- External Dynamic List
- Update Server
- Test Cloud Logging Service Status
- Test Cloud GP Service Status
- Device > Virtual Systems
- Device > Shared Gateways
- Device > Certificate Management
- Device > Certificate Management > Certificate Profile
- Device > Certificate Management > OCSP Responder
- Device > Certificate Management > SSL/TLS Service Profile
- Device > Certificate Management > SCEP
- Device > Certificate Management > SSL Decryption Exclusion
- Device > Certificate Management > SSH Service Profile
- Device > Response Pages
- Device > Server Profiles
- Device > Server Profiles > SNMP Trap
- Device > Server Profiles > Syslog
- Device > Server Profiles > Email
- Device > Server Profiles > HTTP
- Device > Server Profiles > NetFlow
- Device > Server Profiles > RADIUS
- Device > Server Profiles > TACACS+
- Device > Server Profiles > LDAP
- Device > Server Profiles > Kerberos
- Device > Server Profiles > SAML Identity Provider
- Device > Server Profiles > DNS
- Device > Server Profiles > Multi Factor Authentication
- Device > Local User Database > Users
- Device > Local User Database > User Groups
- Device > Scheduled Log Export
- Device > Software
- Device > Dynamic Updates
- Device > Licenses
- Device > Support
- Device > Policy Recommendation
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- Network > GlobalProtect > MDM
- Network > GlobalProtect > Clientless Apps
- Network > GlobalProtect > Clientless App Groups
- Objects > GlobalProtect > HIP Profiles
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- Use the Panorama Web Interface
- Context Switch
- Panorama Commit Operations
- Defining Policies on Panorama
- Log Storage Partitions for a Panorama Virtual Appliance in Legacy Mode
- Panorama > Setup > Interfaces
- Panorama > High Availability
- Panorama > Administrators
- Panorama > Admin Roles
- Panorama > Access Domains
- Panorama > Device Groups
- Panorama > Plugins
- Panorama > Log Ingestion Profile
- Panorama > Log Settings
- Panorama > Server Profiles > SCP
- Panorama > Scheduled Config Export
End-of-Life (EoL)
Actions Supported on Applications
You can perform any of the following actions on this
page:
Actions Supported
for Applications | Description |
---|---|
Filter by application |
|
Add a new application. | To add a new application, see Defining
Applications. |
View and/or customize application details. | Click the application name link, to view
the application description including the standard port and characteristics
of the application, risk among other details. For details on the
application settings, see Defining
Applications. If the icon to the left of the application
name has a yellow pencil ( |
Disable an applications | You can Disable an
application (or several applications) so that the application signature
is not matched against traffic. Security rules defined to block,
allow, or enforce a matching application are not applied to the
application traffic when the app is disabled. You might choose to
disable an application that is included with a new content release
version because policy enforcement for the application might change
when the application is uniquely identified. For example, an application
that is identified as web-browsing traffic is allowed by the firewall
prior to a new content version installation; after installing the
content update, the uniquely identified application no longer matches
the Security rule that allows web-browsing traffic. In this case,
you could choose to disable the application so that traffic matched
to the application signature continues to be classified as web-browsing
traffic and is allowed. |
Enable an application | Select a disabled application and Enable it
so that the firewall can manage the application according to your
configured security policies. |
Import an application | To import an application, click Import.
Browse to select the file, and select the target virtual system
from the Destination drop-down. |
Export an application | To export an application, select this option
for the application and click Export. Follow
the prompts to save the file. |
Export an application configuration table | Export the information on all applications
in PDF/CSV format. Only visible columns in the
web interface are exported. See Export Configuration Table Data. |
Assess policy impact after installing a
new content release | Review Policies to
assess the policy-based enforcement for applications before and
after installing a content release version. Use the Policy Review
dialog to review policy impact for new applications included in
a downloaded content release version. The Policy Review dialog allows
you to add or remove a pending application (an application that
is downloaded with a content release version but is not installed
on the firewall) to or from an existing Security policy rule; policy
changes for pending applications do not take effect until the corresponding
content release version is installed. You can also access the Policy
Review dialog when downloading and installing content release versions
on the DeviceDynamic
Updates page. |
Tag an application | A predefined tag named sanctioned is
available for you to tag SaaS applications. While a SaaS application
is an application that is identified as Saas=yes in
the details on application characteristics, you can use the sanctioned
tag on any application. Tag applications
as sanctioned to help differentiate sanctioned SaaS
application traffic from unsanctioned SaaS application traffic, for
example, when you examine the SaaS Application Usage Report or when
you evaluate the applications on your network. Select
an application, click Edit Tags and from
the drop-down, select the predefined Sanctioned tag
to identify any application that you want to explicitly allow on
your network. When you then generate the SaaS Application Usage
Report (see Monitor
> PDF Reports > SaaS Application Usage), you can compare statistics
on the application that you have sanctioned versus unsanctioned
SaaS applications that are being used on your network. When
you tag an application as sanctioned, the following restrictions
apply:
You can also Remove
tag or Override tag. The override
option is only available on a firewall that has inherited settings
from a device group pushed from Panorama. |