It's probably not as straight forward as you'd like, but here's how this works.
The request for the homepage is routed to the indexAction
method of the Mage_Cms_IndexController
class.
If you take a look at the indexAction
method you can see Magento uses the renderPage
method of the cms/page
helper object to render the contents of the page
#File: app/code/core/Mage/Cms/controllers/IndexController.php
public function indexAction($coreRoute = null)
{
$pageId = Mage::getStoreConfig(Mage_Cms_Helper_Page::XML_PATH_HOME_PAGE);
if (!Mage::helper('cms/page')->renderPage($this, $pageId)) {
$this->_forward('defaultIndex');
}
}
The $pageId
is pulled from Magento's system configuration, and is the URL identifier of the CMS page.
If you hop to the renderPage
method
#File: app/code/core/Mage/Cms/Helper/Page.php
public function renderPage(Mage_Core_Controller_Front_Action $action, $pageId = null)
{
return $this->_renderPage($action, $pageId);
}
it wraps the call to the protected _renderPage
method. If you hop to THAT method, the page loading code is the following portions.
#File: app/code/core/Mage/Cms/Helper/Page.php
protected function _renderPage(Mage_Core_Controller_Varien_Action $action, $pageId = null, $renderLayout = true)
{
$page = Mage::getSingleton('cms/page');
//...
if (!$page->load($pageId)) {
return false;
}
//...
}
This loads the CMS Page object for the homepage. Notice the model is a singleton, which means other code that instantes the singleton later will have the same page. After this, standard Magento page rendering happens. Possibly relevant to your interests, the content layout blocks end up looking like this
Meaning the block HTML for the CMS page is rendered by the following code in Mage_Cms_Block_Page
#File: app/code/core/Mage/Cms/Helper/Page.php
protected function _toHtml()
{
/* @var $helper Mage_Cms_Helper_Data */
$helper = Mage::helper('cms');
$processor = $helper->getPageTemplateProcessor();
$html = $processor->filter($this->getPage()->getContent());
$html = $this->getMessagesBlock()->toHtml() . $html;
return $html;
}
The getPage
method instantiates the same singleton we mentioned above. The other code is what replaces CMS page {{...}}
directives with their actual content.
If I was approaching this project, I'd consider a class rewrite for the Mage_Cms_Model_Page
object that looks something like this.
public function load($id, $field=null)
{
if( ... is mobile site ... AND ... $id is for the home page ...)
{
$id = ... ID of the mobile site, hard coded or pulled from custom config ...;
}
return parent::load($id, $field);
}
There's also the cms_page_render
event which fires after the page has loaded in the _renderPage
method. You could try reloading the passed in page object with a different ID in the observer. You could also consider something in the model_load_after
or model_load_before
events — although that gets trickier to do since you can't directly change the ID.
For code that's not going to leave a single client's system, I usually opt for the rewrite these days, since it's quicker (less expensive for clients) and has less complications (i.e. getting at and changing the information you need) during development. The trade-off is a possible future conflict with someone else who's rewriting the class.
Your milage/philosophy may vary.
Good luck!