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I would like to upload my public key to a key server, but I already have my key infrastructure in place without GPG and I don't want to install extra software I don't need. Is there an easy way to ASCII-armor my public key without installing the whole GnuPG software suite?

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OpenPGP's "Radix-64" ASCII armor, described in RFC 4880 § 6, is mostly just standard Base64 with PEM-like begin/end headers, and with a CRC24 checksum at the end. It can be implemented like this:

  1. Write the Armor Header Line; optional Armor Headers; and a blank line:

    -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
    Version: conradpgp v1.0
    (leave this line empty)
    
  2. Write the Base64-encoded message, wrapped to 76 characters per line.

  3. Write the checksum line, consisting of a = followed by the Base64-encoded Armor Checksum:

    The checksum is a 24-bit Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) converted to
    four characters of radix-64 encoding by the same MIME base64
    transformation, preceded by an equal sign (=). The CRC is computed
    by using the generator 0x864CFB and an initialization of 0xB704CE.
    The accumulation is done on the data before it is converted to
    radix-64, rather than on the converted data. A sample implementation
    of this algorithm is in the next section.

    (See section 6.1 for the example CRC24 code.)

  4. Finally, write the Armor Tail:

    -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
    
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