Don't hesitate to reach out to us on IRC at [#lightning-dev @ freenode.net](http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=%23lightning-dev), [#c-lightning @ freenode.net](http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=%23c-lightning), or on the mailing list [lightning-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org](https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/lightning-dev).
c-lightning currently only works on Linux (and possibly Mac OS with some tweaking), and requires a locally running `bitcoind` that is fully caught up with the network you're testing on.
Wait until `bitcoind` has synchronized with the testnet network. In case you use regtest, make sure you generate at least 432 blocks to activate SegWit.
You can start `lightningd` with the following command:
Eventually `lightningd` will include its own wallet making this transfer easier, but for now this is how it gets its funds.
If you don't have any testcoins you can get a few from a faucet such as [TPs' testnet faucet](http://tpfaucet.appspot.com/) or [Kiwi's testnet faucet](https://testnet.manu.backend.hamburg/faucet).
Once `lightningd` has funds, we can connect to a node and open a channel.
Let's assume the remote node is accepting connections at `<ip>:<port>` and has the node ID `<node_id>`:
The funding transaction needs 6 confirmations in order for the channel to be usable.
You can check the status of the channel using `cli/lightning-cli getpeers`, which after 1 confirmation should say that the status is in _Normal operation_.
After 6 confirmations you can use `cli/lightning-cli getchannels` to verify that the channel shows up in the list of open channels.