ELFЅ4`4 (444p p p pp$$ ((( Qtd/lib/ld-linux.so.2GNU  @ |CEK8qX  Q~zYH+_$<qȊ6 0 MH|>gM:Mq5.gii Tdhlptx|     U)5\%`%dh%hh%lh%ph%th %xh(%|h0%h8p%h@`%hHP%hP@%hX0%h` %hh1^PTRhhQVh7US[XtX[ÐU=t ҡuÐUtt $ÐUD$ D$D$$Њ$ U(E}D$ D$0D$$pED$ED$$5E}y1D$ D$D$$W${}tE< tE)EEE}E} EEEÍL$qUWVQLE8 BADžDž(u EFDž Dž(u=FD$T$E$E܃}tEGEE$E}u$ nD$E$EED$D$$E$IE(:5AF$EED$E$E܃}t5i$oD$ ED$D$,$ED$D$W$/8LY^_]aÐU]Ít&'UWVS^=E)E}Ut+1ƍED$E D$E$9}u߃[^_]Ë$ÐUSppt Ћu[]US[ä`Y[usage: setcap [-q] (-|) [ ... (-|) ] This program can be used to set the process capabilities of running processes. In order to work, it needs to be executing with CAP_SETPCAP raised, and the only capabilities that this program can bestow on others are a subset of its effective set. This program is mostly intended as an example -- a safe use of CAP_SETPCAP has yet to be demonstrated! [Copyright (c) 1997-8 Andrew G. Morgan ] Please enter caps for file [empty line to end]: [Error - aborting] -q-fatal error[caps set to: %s ] Failed to set cap's on process `%d': (%s) [caps set on %d] g  oH XpP@o oooo<oop?_i5*pв f |`elibcap.so.1__gmon_start___Jv_RegisterClasses_fini_initcap_to_textcap_freecapsetpcap_from_textlibc.so.6_IO_stdin_usedexitperror__errno_locationreadstderrfwriteatoifprintfstrerror__libc_start_main_edata__bss_start_endGLIBC_2.0/lib/ld-linux.so.2^^^^^_Ȋ8_<_L_____̿п0ԿؿܿٳELFЅ4h4 (444p p p pp4< ((( Qtd (( !oHH@+ p3;o.Ho   W @@` PPp id؄oЅu {Ċ ll pp xx   TTXXD.shstrtab.interp.note.ABI-tag.gnu.hash.dynsym.dynstr.gnu.version.gnu.version_r.rel.dyn.rel.plt.init.text.fini.rodata.eh_frame.ctors.dtors.jcr.dynamic.got.got.plt.data.bss.dynbss.gnu.liblist.gnu.conflict.gnu.prelink_undo (( !oHH@+ po<;o.Ho   W @@` PPp id؄oЅu {Ċ ll pp xx   TTXXD3  h