Since 3bdc651a62, start.sh creates the logs/current symlink even if
LOGDIR was set in the environment, as is the case when using run-all.sh.
However, run-all.sh and start.sh use a separate 'date' invocation so the
resulting string may be different. Usually it is the same because the
two invocations immediately follow each other, *except* if run-all.sh
also does a build. In addition, if the user sets LOGDIR to something
else, the symlink is completely bogus.
Fix this by not relying on the 'date' invocation for creating the
symlink. Instead, use the basename of LOGDIR. To keep things consistent
with current behavior, only create the symlink if LOGDIR points to a
subdirectory of DIR/logs.
The following use cases now work reliably:
* run-all.sh with or without the -B option;
* manually calling start.sh followed by run-tests.py without setting
LOGDIR.
* manually calling start.sh with LOGDIR set to a subdirectory of logs
and calling run-tests.py without --logdir option (which makes it
default to logs/current).
* run-all.sh with LOGDIR set to a subdirectory of logs.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>