The coding style guide says:

"Variables should be declared at the start of a block of code rather than in 
the middle. The exception to this is when the variable is const in which case 
the declaration must be at the point of first use/assignment. Declaring 
variable inside a for loop is OK."

Since DPDK switched to C11, variables can be declared where they are used, 
which reduces the risk of using effectively uninitialized variables. 
"Effectively uninitialized" means initialized to 0 or NULL where declared, to 
silence any compiler warnings about the use of uninitialized variables.

Can we please agree to remove the recommendation/requirement to declare 
variables at the start of a block of code?

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