> list the chipsets it supports You may find it later that "supported" is not what you are thinking of. There is something there as a hardware driver, but sometimes is an ugly puzzle gathered from multiple sources, most of the time without vendor documentation, not tested enough, etc. Some developers my get angry with my remarks, but maybe I should let them evaluate the drivers.
Anyway, depending of hardware, be prepared to find out that some options are not available, some are badly working and some are fine for the daily usage because some users tested them in production and had no major issues or no issues at all. No offense intended to anyone. It is what it is, the drivers are not pure algorithms waiting for someone to code the, they usually rely heavily on vendor documentations. If more people ask for it, I can try to write a poem about network, even with my bad english.