Before chasing the "all satellite fixed" dream, you must understand the engine. CCCam is a protocol and software application designed for conditional access sharing. It allows one legitimate smart card (e.g., Sky UK, Canal+, ORF, DigiTurk) to be shared over a local network or the internet to multiple receivers.
Or restart your receiver entirely
Create /etc/CCcam.whitelist to stop CCCam from trying dead encryption schemes:
: Reset the ECM cache weekly and maintain 15–20% free space on the internal flash or USB to avoid decryption delays. Hardware Alignment
The server is actively managed to maintain connection stability even during high-traffic events like live sports.
CCcam is a protocol used for card sharing — a method where one legitimate subscription card (e.g., Sky, Canal+, TNT) is shared over a network (often the internet) to multiple receivers. CCcam runs on Linux-based receivers (like Dreambox, Vu+, or Octagon) and allows a server to distribute decryption keys to clients.
You will receive a C-line (e.g., C: server port user pass ) from the provider, which must be installed in the /etc folder of your receiver. How to Choose a Reliable Provider
This file tells CCCam which decryption method to try first for each satellite. Save this as /etc/CCcam.prio :
For a permanent fix on modern satellite packages, migrate from the legacy CCcam protocol to Oscam. CCcam has not received official software updates in years, making it highly vulnerable to modern anti-cascading and pairing technologies used by providers. Oscam handles fast ECM changes much more efficiently and can read your existing CCcam C-lines perfectly. Risks and Considerations
Many premium servers block multi-satellite clients. If you request ECMs from 4 different satellites within 10 seconds, anti-card sharing systems (like Sky’s patches) lock the card for 5 minutes. You will see "card not found" or "smart card error."