Building, sort of, off of that, here's the breakdown Boehner's office provided to the Washington Post, to the extent that he has one.
$800 billion in unspecified "pro-growth tax reform that closes special-interest loopholes and deductions while lowering rates."
$600 billion in Medicare savings that would include raising the eligibility age and "structural Medicare reform." That's what they euphemistically call Ryan's voucher system, but it's not clear from the information available if that's what they're talking about now.
$300 billion in other "mandatory" savings, including farm subsidies. No further details there.
$200 billion through revising the Consumer Price Index for all federal beneficiaries, including Social Security recipients. This is the chained CPI we've been hearing about for the past year and a half that would produce benefit cuts over time.
$300 billion in further unspecified discretionary cuts.
For those keeping track, according to WaPo, that's $1.2 trillion in savings and $800 billion in revenue that probably actually isn't achievable. So here's the contrast with what Obama has presented:
On revenue: Obama $1.6T (with details), GOP $800B (no details)
On spending: Obama $400B, GOP $1.2T (scant details either side)
Debt ceiling: Obama addresses, GOP avoids