According to the NIST FIPS 140-2 Security Policy for PAN-OS 9.0 , this virtual firewall file creates a distinct Logical Cryptographic Module (LCM) boundary inside the guest environment, managing security mechanisms at a programmatic layer. Minimum System Requirements
Here is a comprehensive look at what this specific image offers and how it fits into a modern network security architecture. What is the PA-VM-KVM-9.0.1.qcow2?
Virtual firewalls are essential for securing modern data centers and cloud environments. The Palo Alto Networks PA-VM series brings next-generation firewall (NGFW) capabilities into a virtualized form factor. A core deployment file for Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) environments is the image.
Change the interface model configuration from e1000 to virtio . Lack of dedicated CPU execution Pa-vm-kvm-9.0.1.qcow2
The following potential issues were identified:
Do you have a specific vendor or use case for this file? If so, adjust the deployment steps to match the vendor’s hardware requirements (RAM, CPU, NIC drivers). Always consult the official documentation for the appliance inside the QCOW2 before scaling to production.
Set the OS type to and Version to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.0 (or generic modern Linux). According to the NIST FIPS 140-2 Security Policy
The qm importdisk command imports the QCOW2 file into the VM storage. Depending on the storage type, Proxmox may convert it to raw automatically if the underlying storage does not support QCOW2.
Minimum of 2 (4 or more recommended for production traffic processing).
: At least three (Management, Untrust, Trust). Performance Tuning Virtual firewalls are essential for securing modern data
The file is identified as a virtual machine disk image intended for the hypervisor. Based on the naming pattern, it is almost certainly a Palo Alto Networks Next-Generation Firewall (NGFW) or VM-Series virtual appliance. Version 9.0.1 places it in an older, likely end-of-life (EOL) release cycle.
SELinux or AppArmor blocks access to the QCOW2 file. Fix:
Upon first boot, access the console to set the management credentials. By default, PAN-OS uses: admin Password: admin