I don't think there's too much info in that question. It's entirely appropriate to spend a few sentences briefly describing what the purpose of the code snippet is. It's not always necessary (although sometimes it is) to add some greater context to the code beyond what the specific problem with it is, but it's typically helpful, so long as it's a suitably brief description (yours seems fine in length).
As for whether all of the code was necessary, I don't know enough about the subject matter to comment. It's not so long that I'd be super worried about trying to shorten it, but perhaps a subject matter might be able to realize that you could cut 1/3 of it out without meaningfully changing the question; I wouldn't know. If such a change would be possible, it would likely be helpful, although it's not so long of a snippet as is that I'd consider it essential for the question to shorten the code.
All that said, you do have enough information that you probably do want to be rather mindful about how you format it, not just what you include. Burying the actual question halfway through the question, with several paragraphs of preceding information and several paragraphs of following information, isn't ideal. It more or less forces the reader to read the whole thing just to figure out what you're actually asking. You bolded the question, which does help, but really it's better if you can just lead with the question, so that you don't need to bold it. If you open with the problem you're having, then explain your code and then, if necessary, repeat the question later (about where you have your question now) once you've finished setting up the question.
In general when you're writing a question that is adding information that you think might be useful, but may also not be essential to an answerer, you want to be careful about where you put it in the question. Ensure that readers start by reading everything that's essential and then move on to supplemental information that might be helpful, but also may not be necessary. When you start with the supplemental information, and then move on to the critical information, you risk people missing some of the critical information, or simply giving up on your question and moving on because reading the first half didn't give them any idea what the question is actually about.