Policies > Application Override
To change how the firewall classifies network traffic
into applications, you can specify application override policies.
For example, if you want to control one of your custom applications,
an application override policy can be used to identify traffic for
that application according to zone, source and destination address,
port, and protocol. If you have network applications that are classified
as “unknown,” you can create new application definitions for them
(refer to
Defining Applications).
If possible, avoid using application
override policies because they prevent the firewall from using App-ID
to identify applications and from performing layer 7 inspection
for threats. To support internal proprietary applications, it’s
better to
create custom applications that
include the application signature so the firewall performs layer
7 inspection and scans the application traffic for threats. If a
commercial application doesn’t have an App-ID,
submit a request for a new App-ID.
If a public application definition (default ports or signature)
changes so the firewall no longer identifies the application correctly,
create a support ticket so Palo Alto Networks can update the definition.
In the meantime, create a custom application so the firewall continues
to perform layer 7 inspection of the traffic.
Like security policies, application override policies can be
as general or specific as needed. The policy rules are compared
against the traffic in sequence, so the more specific rules must
precede the more general ones.
Because the App-ID engine in PAN-OS classifies traffic by identifying
the application-specific content in network traffic, the custom
application definition cannot simply use a port number to identify
an application. The application definition must also include traffic
(restricted by source zone, source IP address, destination zone,
and destination IP address).
To create a custom application with application override:
Use the following tables to configure an application override
rule.
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