To open **Onion Circuits**, click on the Tor status icon ([[!img lib/symbolic/tor-disconnected.png alt="Tor status menu" link="no" class="symbolic"]] or [[!img lib/symbolic/tor-connected.png alt="Tor status menu" link="no" class="symbolic"]]) in the top-right corner and choose **Open Onion View Tor Circuits**.
To open **Onion Circuits**, click on the Tor status icon ([[!img lib/symbolic/tor-disconnected.png alt="Tor status menu" link="no" class="symbolic"]] or [[!img lib/symbolic/tor-connected.png alt="Tor status menu" link="no" class="symbolic"]]) in the top-right corner and choose **View Tor Circuits**.
Tor uses only 2 different relays as your entry guards, as a way of [protecting against *end-to-end correlation* attacks](https://support.torproject.org/about/entry-guards/).
To keep the same entry guard across different Tails sessions, use a Tor bridge instead.
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[[!img doc/anonymous_internet/tor/tor.png link="no" class="svg" alt="Schematics of a connection to Tor with the client, the 3 relays, and the destination server."]]
[[!img doc/anonymous_internet/tor/tor.png link="no" class="svg" alt="Schematics of a connection to Tor with the client, the 3 relays, and the destination server."]]
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<h1 id="changerestart">Closing and replacing all Tor circuits</h1>
Tails restarts Tor and all circuits are replaced if you disconnect and reconnect from your local network, for example, by turning the Wi-Fi off and on again.