I am currently trying to deploy Jenkins in an environment that will never 
have a connection to the internet.  We have a DNS server on the network 
that handles all the internal traffic.  After installing Jenkins I have 
noticed that this DNS server is bombarded with requests for resolving 
things like wiki.jenkins-ci.org and updates.jenkins-ci.org.  Additionally I 
have to manually install plugins which each add another layer of requests 
seen.  These request happen whenever an action is preformed in the web 
application or upon page refresh.  And from what I can tell they are all 
being received by the DNS server on port 53.

I don't think that configuring a HTTP Proxy is the solution in this case, 
as the internet will never be accessible.  Is there some way to stop these 
requests from Jenkins internally?  Or should I be looking at some other 
solution, like adding a rule to the firewall somewhere?  All the machines 
on the network are running various versions of CentOS.  I am using Jenkins 
version 1.545.

I have to admit that I am a newbie to Jenkins and if this answer exists 
somewhere else I have not seen it.  Any help would be greatly appreciated. 
 If I need to provide more information please let me know.

John

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