: Global Services Settings
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Global Services Settings

Table of Contents

Global Services Settings

  • Device > Setup > Services
To control and redirect DNS queries between shared and specific virtual systems, you can use a DNS proxy and a DNS Server profile.
Global Services Settings
Description
Services
Update Server
Represents the IP address or host name of the server from which to download updates from Palo Alto Networks. The current value is updates.paloaltonetworks.com. Do not change this setting unless instructed by technical support.
Verify Update Server Identity
If you enable this option, the firewall or Panorama will verify that the server from which the software or content package is download has an SSL certificate signed by a trusted authority. This adds an additional level of security for the communication between firewalls or Panorama servers and the update server.
Verify the update server identity to validate that the server has an SSL certificate signed by a trusted authority.
DNS Settings
Choose the type of DNS service—Servers or DNS Proxy Object—for all DNS queries that the firewall initiates in support of FQDN address objects, logging, and firewall management. Options include:
  • Primary and secondary DNS servers to provide domain name resolution.
  • A DNS proxy configured on the firewall as an alternative to configuring DNS servers. If you enable a DNS proxy, you must enable Cache and EDNS Cache Responses (NetworkDNS ProxyAdvanced).
Primary DNS Server
Enter the IP address of the primary DNS server for DNS queries from the firewall. For example, to find the update server, to resolve DNS entries in logs, or resolve FDQN-based address objects.
Secondary DNS Server
(Optional) Enter the IP address of a secondary DNS server to use if the primary server is unavailable.
Minimum FQDN Refresh Time (sec)
Set a limit on how fast the firewall refreshes FQDNs that it receives from a DNS. The firewall refreshes an FQDN based on the TTL of the FQDN as long as the TTL is greater than or equal to this Minimum FQDN Refresh Time (in seconds). If the TTL is less than this Minimum FQDN Refresh Time, the firewall refreshes the FQDN based on this Minimum FQDN Refresh Time (that is, the firewall does not honor TTLs faster than this setting). The timer starts when the firewall receives a DNS response from the DNS server or DNS proxy object resolving the FQDN (range is 0 to 14,400; default is 30). A setting of 0 means the firewall will refresh the FQDN based on the TTL value in the DNS and does not enforce a minimum FQDN refresh time.
If the TTL for the FQDN in the DNS is short, but FQDN resolutions don’t change as frequently as the TTL timeframe so don’t require a faster refresh, you should set a minimum FQDN Refresh Time to avoid unnecessary FQDN refresh attempts.
FQDN Stale Entry Timeout (min)
Specify the length of time (in minutes) that the firewall continues to use stale FQDN resolutions in the event of a network failure or unreachable DNS server —when an FQDN is not getting refreshed (range is 0 to 10,080; default is 1,440). A value of 0 means the firewall does not continue to use a stale entry. If the DNS server is still unreachable at the end of the state timeout, the FQDN entry becomes unresolved (stale resolutions are removed).
Make sure the FQDN Stale Entry Timeout value is short enough to not allow incorrect traffic forwarding (which poses a security risk), but is long enough to allow traffic continuity without causing an unplanned network outage.
Proxy Server section
Server
If the firewall needs to use a proxy server to reach Palo Alto Networks update services, enter the IP address or host name of the proxy server.
Port
Enter the port for the proxy server.
User
Enter the username for the administrator to enter when accessing the proxy server.
Password/Confirm Password
Enter and confirm the password for the administrator to enter when accessing the proxy server.
Use proxy to send logs to Strata Logging Service
Enable the firewall to send logs to Strata Logging Servicethrough the proxy server.
NTP
NTP Server Address
Enter the IP address or hostname of an NTP server that you will use to synchronize the clock on the firewall. Optionally, you can enter the IP address or hostname of a second NTP server to synchronize the clock on the firewall if the primary server becomes unavailable.
When an NTP server keeps all network firewall clocks synchronized, scheduled jobs run as expected and timestamps can help identify the root causes of issues that involve multiple devices. Configure a primary and a secondary NTP server in case the primary NTP server becomes unreachable.
Authentication Type
You can enable the firewall to authenticate time updates from an NTP server. For each NTP server, select the type of authentication for the firewall to use:
  • None (default)—Select this option to disable NTP Authentication.
  • Symmetric Key—Select this option for the firewall to use symmetric key exchange (shared secrets) to authenticate time updates from the NTP server. If you select Symmetric Key, continue by specifying the following values:
    • Key ID—Enter the Key ID (1–65534).
    • Algorithm—Select the MD5 or SHA1 algorithm to use for NTP authentication.
    • Authentication Key/Confirm Authentication Key—Enter and confirm the authentication key for the authentication algorithm.
  • Autokey—Select this option for the firewall to use autokey (public key cryptography) to authenticate time updates from the NTP server.
Enable NTP server authentication so that the NTP server approves the client and provides synchronized updates.