+Note that an RSA key is generated by finding two primes of half the
+length requested, and then multiplying them together. For example,
+if you ask PuTTYgen for a 1024-bit RSA key, it will create two
+512-bit primes and multiply them. The result of this multiplication
+might be 1024 bits long, or it might be only 1023; so you may not
+get the exact length of key you asked for. This is perfectly normal,
+and you do not need to worry. The lengths should only ever differ by
+one, and there is no perceptible drop in security as a result.
+
+DSA keys are not created by multiplying primes together, so they
+should always be exactly the length you asked for.
+