Manage Historical Device Telemetry
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Manage Historical Device Telemetry

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End-of-Life (EoL)

Manage Historical Device Telemetry

For PAN-OS 10.0, support for prior telemetry data collection is reduced.
Device Telemetry changed significantly for the PAN-OS 10.0 release. Prior to 10.0, telemetry data was mostly of interest for threat intelligence purposes. As of 10.0, threat intelligence metrics are still a large portion the data collected by the device, but a great deal more data involving the health, performance, and configuration of the device is collected as well.
In other words, PAN-OS 10.0 device telemetry extends the data that was collected for previous releases. PAN-OS 10.0 also sends telemetry data to a different cloud location than did prior releases. But the historical telemetry support still exists for next-generation firewalls running PAN-OS 10.0. The only difference is that the 10.0 device telemetry user interface is not capable of managing this historical data collection.
If you have an existing next-generation firewall, and you have any of the historical telemetry data categories enabled, then when you upgrade to PAN-OS 10.0 your firewall will continue to collect and share this information. If you want to turn this telemetry data sharing off, use the following CLI commands:
set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service application-reports no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-reports no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-information no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-pcap no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service passive-dns-monitoring no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service url-reports no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service health-performance-reports no set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service file-identification-reports no
If you have a 10.0 firewall and this telemetry sharing is turned off, but you want to share this data with Palo Alto Networks, then you can turn it on using:
set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service application-reports yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-reports yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-information yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service threat-prevention-pcap yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service passive-dns-monitoring yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service url-reports yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service health-performance-reports yes set deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service file-identification-reports yes
You can see whether your device is collecting and sharing this historical telemetry data using the following CLI command:
show deviceconfig system update-schedule statistics-service