The Intel Xeon 6767P carries a Thermal Design Power (TDP) of 350W and is fabricated on a 3 nm semiconductor process, reflecting a compact manufacturing node suited to dense server configurations. It operates with a maximum CPU temperature of 101 °C and connects to the system via PCIe 5.0, enabling high-bandwidth connectivity for compatible peripherals and accelerators. The processor fully supports 64-bit computing but does not include integrated graphics, making it intended for deployments where a discrete graphics solution or none at all is expected.
The Intel Xeon 6767P runs 64 cores at a base clock of 2.4 GHz, supporting 128 threads in total, with a Turbo Boost 2 frequency reaching up to 3.9 GHz under appropriate conditions. The clock multiplier is set at 24 and does not support an unlocked multiplier, meaning frequency adjustments are fixed. The cache structure is generous across all levels: 7168 KB of L1, 128 MB of L2 at 2 MB per core, and a 336 MB L3 cache distributed at 5.25 MB per core, providing substantial on-die storage to help sustain throughput across the processor's many cores.
The Intel Xeon 6767P uses DDR5 memory and supports speeds of up to 8000 MHz across eight memory channels, allowing for substantial memory bandwidth in multi-channel configurations. It accommodates a maximum memory capacity of 4000 GB, making it well-suited for memory-intensive server workloads. ECC memory is supported, which helps maintain data integrity by detecting and correcting single-bit errors. The processor also operates with a bus transfer rate of 24 GT/s, contributing to the overall throughput between the CPU and connected system components.
The Intel Xeon 6767P supports multithreading, allowing each physical core to handle multiple threads simultaneously to improve overall throughput. It includes the NX bit, a hardware-level security feature that helps prevent certain classes of malicious code execution by marking memory regions as non-executable. The processor also supports a broad range of instruction sets — MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2 — covering vectorized math, floating-point operations, hardware-accelerated encryption, and advanced multimedia processing capabilities.