Table of Contents
Self.Hosted 31.xx
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- Getting started
- System Requirements
- Cluster Context
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- Prisma Cloud Container Images
- Kubernetes
- Deploy the Prisma Cloud Console on Amazon ECS
- Console on Fargate
- Onebox
- Alibaba Cloud Container Service for Kubernetes (ACK)
- Azure Container Service (ACS) with Kubernetes
- Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
- Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
- IBM Kubernetes Service (IKS)
- OpenShift v4
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- Defender Types
- Manage your Defenders
- Redeploy Defenders
- Uninstall Defenders
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- Deploy Orchestrator Defenders on Amazon ECS
- Automatically Install Container Defender in a Cluster
- Deploy Prisma Cloud Defender from the GCP Marketplace
- Deploy Defenders as DaemonSets
- VMware Tanzu Application Service (TAS) Defender
- Deploy Defender on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) Autopilot
- Deploy Defender on OpenShift v4
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- Agentless Scanning Modes
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- Onboard AWS Accounts for Agentless Scanning
- Onboard Azure Accounts for Agentless Scanning
- Configure Agentless Scanning for Azure
- Onboard GCP Accounts for Agentless Scanning
- Configure Agentless Scanning for GCP
- Onboard Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Accounts for Agentless Scanning
- Configure Agentless Scanning for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI)
- Agentless Scanning Results
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- Rule ordering and pattern matching
- Backup and Restore
- Custom feeds
- Configuring Prisma Cloud proxy settings
- Prisma Cloud Compute certificates
- Configure scanning
- User certificate validity period
- Enable HTTP access to Console
- Set different paths for Defender and Console (with DaemonSets)
- Authenticate to Console with Certificates
- Configure custom certs from a predefined directory
- Customize terminal output
- Collections
- Tags
- Logon settings
- Reconfigure Prisma Cloud
- Subject Alternative Names
- WildFire Settings
- Log Scrubbing
- Clustered-DB
- Permissions by feature
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- Logging into Prisma Cloud
- Integrating with an IdP
- Integrate with Active Directory
- Integrate with OpenLDAP
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with Open ID Connect
- Integrate with Okta via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate Google G Suite via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with Azure Active Directory via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with PingFederate via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with Windows Server 2016 & 2012r2 Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with GitHub
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with OpenShift
- Non-default UPN suffixes
- Compute user roles
- Assign roles
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- Prisma Cloud Vulnerability Feed
- Scanning Procedure
- Vulnerability Management Policies
- Vulnerability Scan Reports
- Scan Images for Custom Vulnerabilities
- Base images
- Vulnerability Explorer
- CVSS scoring
- CVE Viewer
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- Configure Registry Scans
- Scan Images in Alibaba Cloud Container Registry
- Scan Images in Amazon Elastic Container Registry (ECR)
- Scan images in Azure Container Registry (ACR)
- Scan Images in Docker Registry v2 (including Docker Hub)
- Scan Images in GitLab Container Registry
- Scan images in Google Artifact Registry
- Scan Images in Google Container Registry (GCR)
- Scan Images in Harbor Registry
- Scan Images in IBM Cloud Container Registry
- Scan Images in JFrog Artifactory Docker Registry
- Scan Images in Sonatype Nexus Registry
- Scan images in OpenShift integrated Docker registry
- Scan Images in CoreOS Quay Registry
- Trigger Registry Scans with Webhooks
- Configure VM image scanning
- Configure code repository scanning
- Malware scanning
- Windows container image scanning
- Serverless Functions Scanning
- VMware Tanzu Blobstore Scanning
- Scan App-Embedded workloads
- Troubleshoot Vulnerability Detection
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- Compliance Explorer
- Enforce compliance checks
- CIS Benchmarks
- Prisma Cloud Labs compliance checks
- Serverless functions compliance checks
- Windows compliance checks
- DISA STIG compliance checks
- Custom compliance checks
- Trusted images
- Host scanning
- VM image scanning
- App-Embedded scanning
- Detect secrets
- OSS license management
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- Alert Mechanism
- AWS Security Hub
- Cortex XDR alerts
- Cortex XSOAR alerts
- Email alerts
- Google Cloud Pub/Sub
- Google Cloud Security Command Center
- IBM Cloud Security Advisor
- JIRA Alerts
- PagerDuty alerts
- ServiceNow alerts for Security Incident Response
- ServiceNow alerts for Vulnerability Response
- Slack Alerts
- Splunk Alerts
- Webhook alerts
- API
Releases
In general, you should stay on the latest major release unless you require a feature or fix from a subsequent maintenance release.
We recommend that you upgrade to new major releases as they become available.
For more information, see the Prisma Cloud support lifecycle.
The bell icon in Console automatically notifies you when new releases are available:

Downloading the software
Download the software from the Palo Alto Networks Customer Support portal.
If you don’t see
Prisma Cloud Compute Edition
in the drop-down list, contact customer support.
They’ll send you a direct link to the download.
We are currently working on fixing all accounts that have this issue.- Log into the Customer Support portal.
- Go toUpdates > Software Updates.
- From the drop-down list, selectPrisma Cloud Compute Edition. All releases available for download are displayed.
Downloading the software programmatically
Besides hosting the download on the Customer Support Portal, we also support programmatic download (e.g., curl, wget) of the release directly from our CDN.
The link to the tarball is published in the release notes.
If you don’t see
Prisma Cloud Compute Edition
in the drop-down list, contact customer support.
They’ll send you a direct link to the download.
We are currently working on fixing all accounts that have this issue.- Log into the Customer Support portal.
- Go toUpdates > Software Updates.
- From the drop-down list, selectPrisma Cloud Compute Edition. All releases available for download are displayed.
- Open the releases notes PDF.
- Scroll down to the release information to get the link.
Open-source components
Prisma Cloud includes various open-source components, which may change between releases.
Before installing Prisma Cloud, review the components and licenses listed in prisma-oss-licenses.pdf.
This document is included with every release tarball.
Changes to components or licenses between releases are highlighted.
A full listing of the open-source software and their licenses is also embedded in the Defender image.
For example, to extract the listing from Defender running in a Kubernetes cluster, use the following command:
kubectl exec -ti -n twistlock <DEFENDER_POD> -- cat /usr/local/bin/prisma-oss-licenses.txt
Code names
We often use code names when referring to upcoming releases.
They’re convenient to use in roadmap presentations and other forward-looking communications.
Code names tend to persist even after the release ships.
Version to code name mapping
Version numbers indicate the date a release first shipped, along with the build number, as follows:
<YY>.<MM>.<BUILD-NUMBER>
For example, 22.01.840 is the Joule release, which first shipped in January 2022.
The following table maps versions to code names.
The table is sorted from the newest (top) to the oldest release.