First, did you remove JDK6 or leave it in place? Check your JDK_HOME and any other place it is specified to ensure that you are actually using JDK7. In the XP console type java -version
and ensure it is what is expected. (Close/reopen the command prompt to pick up changes in the Win GUI.)
It was never stated what version of XP you are running -- 64-bit or 32-bit. Ensure the appropriate JDK environment is on the machine. (Depending on exactly what is executing, this can make a tangible difference. Also, the best bet for debugging is to keep it the same as before -- reduce variables.)
Troubleshoot the issue and narrow it down. Does an Eclipse installation perform slower after the upgrade? (Eclipse itself runs in a JVM. It's a good baseline.) Is Eclipse pointing at the correct JDK when you test it? Try other Java tools to see if there is a performance difference. Breakpoints and logging at different control points in the build and any Java executables are your friends.
Since Nant is .NET based, have you looked at the Java process that is actually launched? Is your Ivy distribution really old?
All this said, it is hard for me to believe this is a Java issue and not a configuration challenge on the Windows box. Have you tried it on any other machines, anyway?
jstat -gc PID 5s 12
will give you the memory occupancy and GC counts every 5 seconds for one minute (to see if for some reason, you're almost hitting the maximum heap size and garbage-collecting continuously),jstack PID
will give you a thread dump, which you can do a few times repeatedly (to see if it's for example hung on some network connection, unrelated to your JDK upgrade). Update your question if you need help reading the results. – Frank Pavageau Sep 30 '12 at 20:41