This file is indexed.

/etc/apt-dater-host.conf is in apt-dater-host 1.0.0-3.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

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# front-end for dpkg to use
# Supported: apt-get, aptitude
$DPKGTOOL="apt-get";

# Method to do upgrades, possible values (depends on $DPKGTOOL):
#  upgrade		(apt-get, aptitude on Etch)
#  safe-upgrade		(aptitude)
#  dist-upgrade		(recommended default)
#
# You should use dist-upgrade to get ABI-incompatible upgrades.
$APTUPGRADE='dist-upgrade';

# enable use of --assume-yes on safe-upgrade
$ASSUMEYES=1;

# use this command to become root
$GETROOT="sudo";

# clean package cache after upgrade/install
$CLEANUP=0;

# the installation UUID
$UUIDFILE = '/etc/apt-dater-host.uuid';

# If this host is part of (multiple) cluster(s), you might set a
# symbolic name. Hosts with the same cluster name won't be upgraded
# simultaneously by apt-dater (requires apt-dater 0.9 or above).
#@CLUSTERS = qw(my-db-cluster);

# Check if needrestart is available. This requires the needrestart
# package to be installed.
$NEEDRESTART = (-x '/usr/sbin/needrestart' ? '/usr/sbin/needrestart' : undef);

# On apt-based systems needrestart should to be called by apt directly,
# no need to run it in an interactive mode from within apt-dater-host.
#$RUNNEEDREST++;

##
## If this host is a mission critical system and
## needs scheduled downtimes for upgrades, enable
## (some) of the following $FORBID_* lines:
##

# prevent apt-dater-host from refreshing package lists
#$FORBID_REFRESH=1;

# prevent apt-dater-host from upgrading packages
#$FORBID_UPGRADE=1;

# prevent apt-dater-host from installing packages
#$FORBID_INSTALL=1;