PyCrypto supports PKCS#1 in the sense that it can read in X.509 SubjectPublicKeyInfo
objects that contain an RSA public key encoded in PKCS#1.
Instead, the data encoded in your key is a pure RSAPublicKey
object (that is, an ASN.1 SEQUENCE with two INTEGERs, modulus and public exponent).
You can still read it in though. Try something like:
from Crypto.PublicKey import RSA
from Crypto.Util import asn1
from base64 import b64decode
key64 = 'MIGJAoGBAJNrHWRFgWLqgzSmLBq2G89exgi/Jk1NWhbFB9gHc9MLORmP3BOCJS9k
onzT/+Dk1hdZf00JGgZeuJGoXK9PX3CIKQKRQRHpi5e1vmOCrmHN5VMOxGO4d+znJDEbNHOD
ZR4HzsSdpQ9SGMSx7raJJedEIbr0IP6DgnWgiA7R1mUdAgMBAAE='
keyDER = b64decode(key64)
seq = asn1.DerSequence()
seq.decode(keyDER)
keyPub = RSA.construct( (seq[0], seq[1]) )
Starting from version 2.6, PyCrypto can import also RsaPublicKey
ASN.1 objects.
The code is then much simpler:
from Crypto.PublicKey import RSA
from base64 import b64decode
key64 = b'MIGJAoGBAJNrHWRFgWLqgzSmLBq2G89exgi/Jk1NWhbFB9gHc9MLORmP3BOCJS9k
onzT/+Dk1hdZf00JGgZeuJGoXK9PX3CIKQKRQRHpi5e1vmOCrmHN5VMOxGO4d+znJDEbNHOD
ZR4HzsSdpQ9SGMSx7raJJedEIbr0IP6DgnWgiA7R1mUdAgMBAAE='
keyDER = b64decode(key64)
keyPub = RSA.importKey(keyDER)
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…